Cemetaries Came Alive!

 For I delivered to you as of first importance what I also received: that Christ died for our sins in accordance with the Scriptures, that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day in accordance with the Scriptures, and that he appeared to Cephas, then to the twelve. Then he appeared to more than five hundred brothers at one time, most of whom are still alive, though some have fallen asleep. Then he appeared to James, then to all the apostles. Last of all, as to one untimely born, he appeared also to me [Paul] …12 Now if Christ is proclaimed as raised from the dead, how can some of you say that there is no resurrection of the dead? 13 But if there is no resurrection of the dead, then not even Christ has been raised. 14 And if Christ has not been raised, then our preaching is in vain and your faith is in vain. 15 We are even found to be misrepresenting God, because we testified about God that he raised Christ, whom he did not raise if it is true that the dead are not raised. 16 For if the dead are not raised, not even Christ has been raised. 17 And if Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile and you are still in your sins. 18 Then those also who have fallen asleep in Christ have perished. 19 If in Christ we have hope in this life only, we are of all people most to be pitied. 20 But in fact Christ has been raised from the dead, the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep. -1 Corinthians 15:3-8,12-20 ESV

Today, we join millions of Christians across this nation, if not across the whole world, celebrating the resurrection of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. Today, millions of Christian gather together at sunrise to worship the risen Jesus, meeting at parks, at beaches, at mountains, and even at cemeteries. Yes, you heard me right, cemeteries. Doesn’t sound right for Easter, does it? Cemeteries are something we associate more with Halloween than with Easter.

Christians meeting in cemeteries for church shouldn’t sound like a foreign idea. It’s a rich part of church history. While recent studies may show that Christians didn’t meet in the catacombs in Rome as we thought, early Christians did indeed meet in cemeteries. At first, it was just for practical reasons. During times of persecution, Christians met in cemeteries because cemeteries lied outside the city limits and would not catch the attention of the authorities. Also, with the growing faith, Christians needed a bigger place to come together and worship. What bigger a space than cemetery. But as time went by, meeting in a cemetery to have a deeper meaning.

52 The tombs also were opened. And many bodies of the saints who had fallen asleep were raised, 53 and coming out of the tombs after his resurrection they went into the holy city and appeared to many. -Matthew 27:52,53 ESV

These two verses are commonly forgot in the crucifixion and resurrection story, probably because only Matthew mentions this part of the story, and he really doesn’t put a lot of attention or detail. Who are these “saints” or, as the Greek literally puts it, “holy ones”? Are they Old Testament heroes of the faith? Maybe they aren’t. After all, if Moses or Elijah was to resurrect, walk into the city and say, “Hey, I’m Moses” or “Hey, I’m Elijah,” how could they really prove it? Even today with all our forensic science, we too would have a hard time proving the identity of someone before the time Christ, whether dead or alive. Then perhaps maybe these saints or “holy ones” are people living in the first century A.D. who believed in Jesus as the Messiah and died during Christ’s ministry, like Simeon or Anna from the Christmas story. But then again, the Jews living in Israel today will tell you they know the final resting place of all those Old Testament heroes. They’ve clearly marked, or should I say “decorated,” the tomb of Samuel (trust me, I’ve been there). So maybe it could be those Old Testament heroes. Either way, the truth remains. Upon Christ’s death, the tombs broke open. Upon Christ’s resurrection, the residents of the tombs came alive. The life-giving spirit has given life to those who were dead!

All the early Christians knew what this meant. No longer was death to be feared as the eternal separator and end to all. Their Lord, Savior and God had overcome death once. Now the Christians had hope. They knew by believing in Jesus, they too could look forward to overcoming death and coming back to life, just like the saints and holy ones who had also died and come back to life when Jesus died and came back to life. The early Christians lived out this truth daily in their lives. The laid hands and prayed healing on those who had communicable and fatal diseases. They preached the word of God where the word of God was banned, and they were martyred as a result. Most pertinent to my introduction, Christians worshiped in cemeteries, believing that they were worshipping side-by-side with their brothers and sisters in Christ who were not dead but merely just sleeping until Christ’s return. In fact, cemetery in Greek is koimeteria, which literally means “sleeping place.”

Part of my Easter tradition consists of calling my grandfather to wish him a happy Easter. My grandfather, turning 86 years old this June, is well aware of how close to death. I’m not ashamed or embarrassed to say such, for every holiday he reminds of how close to death he is. Despite being as healthy as an 86 year old can be, he’ll still say something like, “I’m not sure if I’ll be alive when you graduate from seminary or when you sister gets married” or he’ll tell me, “I’m just taking it one day at a time, for I might die tomorrow.” One time he even told me he was just waiting to die! As you can imagine, these calls become quite depressing. Yet when it comes to time to end the call, my grandfather never lets me say “goodbye.” He always says, “No, Graham, do not say ‘goodbye,’ for this is not goodbye. Say ‘so long for now,’ for this is until we talk again.” When Jesus rose from the dead, he removed all the “goodbyes.” He gave us hope that this is not the end, but the best is yet to come. So next time you walk by or drive by a cemetery, remember the resurrection of Jesus Christ, and then remember, this is not “goodbye,” this is just so long for now.

The Parable of the Cheerleader and Tim Dietrich

The Parable of the Cheerleader and Tim Dietrich: A Contemporary, Modern-Day Re-Telling of the Parable of the Rich Man and Lazarus (Luke 16:19-31)

There are two types of teenagers in this world. The teenagers who puberty is friendly towards, and the teenagers who puberty is not so friendly towards.

Sherry McQueen was one of the teenagers who puberty was friendly towards. Almost literally overnight, puberty had turned this girl into a woman. She sprouted up to six feet tall, a height that made both boys and girls jealous of her. She had curves in all the right places, giving her that perfect hourglass-shaped body. Her naturally blonde hair now had a bright shine to it. Her teeth came in straight and shined a radiant pearly white, like she was wearing a set of bleached dentures. And somehow, her skin remained blemish free. In fact, she could easily get a light bronze tan, one that would last for days. All in all, anyone who didn’t know Sherry McQueen, but saw a photo of her, would have thought that her picture was a photoshopped cover of a Seventeen magazine.

Sherry’s new looks gave her new confidence. With her new confidence, Sherry tried out for the high school cheerleading team. Not only did Sherry make the squad, she was soon elected by her fellow cheerleaders as the cheer captain. Her new status, on top of her new looks, quickly shot up her popularity in her high school, until she was the most popular girl in school. She quickly found out that her popularity got her privileges. She got to sit anywhere in the cafeteria. Sometimes people would bring her lunch to her, and some would even pay for her lunch! Every boy would flirt with her, so she got first pick of what boys to date. Each boy, flirting in his own special way, would give Sherry special treatment. Jock boys would carry her books for her from class to class. Nerdy boys would do her homework for her. Prep boys would buy her expensive gifts. Greaser boys would fix her car for her. Even the teachers liked Sherry so much, Sherry got special treatment from them, too! Sherry could easily get excused for showing up late for class, and she sometimes even got to leave early for no reason at all. As if the nerdy boys doing her homework wasn’t enough, some teachers would grade her on a curve or round up her grades, because, let’s face it, the football team and basketball team have no hope of winning of unless the cheerleading captain can lead the cheerleading squad in cheering on the fans. While at first the attention creeped her out, Sherry loved it and gladly accepted it. While Sherry hated school for the usual reasons teenagers hate school, she loved the social life she had there.

But alas, as I said earlier, there’s also the teenagers who puberty is not so friendly towards. Meet Tim Dietrich. Puberty indeed was not too friendly towards him. His growth spurt gave him a whole inch only. The freshman fifteen didn’t wait until college; Tim got it in his freshman year of high school. Being short, chubby, and on top of that, Italian American, would eventually earn him the nickname “Meatball.” The worst part was the acne, for it broke out as if he was having a second round of chicken pox. While Sherry’s good looks gave her confidence and positive attention, Tim’s looks gave him little attention, if any, and it was attention he did not want. Therefore, Tim kept to himself. Instead of spending time with people, he spent time with things. He became fascinated with flying, not just making model airplanes and model rockets, but also sending them into the air. Tim’s unique hobby, however, did not gain him any more friends in school. It just brought him more mocking and more ridicule from his classmates.

Sherry and Tim did know each other. They had a lot of classes together. Tim had once had reached out to Sherry. He had hoped if he could even become friends, his fellow classmates would be nicer to him. Perhaps it would have worked, if Tim would have given Sherry the homework answers that Sherry expected, just like all of her nerdy classmates. Tim may have not been the most moral person out there, but something felt unfair to him that he would do all the hard work to get the same grade as Sherry did. Sherry didn’t take too kindly to Tim’s refusal to do her homework. She joined in on the mocking and ridicule. The other teenagers at the school, not wanting to appear against Sherry, also joined in on her mocking and ridiculing, making Tim’s life even worse.

But alas, high school only takes up four years of a person’s life. Although those four years progressed differently for Sherry and Tim, both had the same end results. Both Sherry and Tim graduated.

It wouldn’t take long for Sherry to wish she didn’t graduate, for she missed high school more than she thought. At high school, she had a life of ease. After high school, she could not get it back. While classmates did Sherry’s homework, none of that mattered when it came to SAT scores. Sherry got a low SAT score. With low SAT score, combined with barely passing grades, Sherry could not get into any college except community college, and she barely got into that. There she found out fellow classmates would not do her homework and professors would not give her the same grading ease her high school teachers gave her. By the end of her fall semester, she had a 0.7 GPA, and by the end of the spring semester, her GPA was 0.5. Sherry dropped out of community college by the end of her freshman year. With no education and no prior job experience, the only job she could grab was the local burger joint, where she rotated between flipping burgers, washing dishes and working the cash register. She came home every day sweaty, stinky and a mess. She found her job gross and repulsive. Because of all this, a depression set in. She stopped caring for herself. Her hair no longer shined, but had become a dirty blonde, matted and knotted. Her teeth turned from white to the yellow her hair use to be. Working in a greasy environment, blemishes broke out, as if the acne part of puberty finally arrived. Without the looks, no men freely handed out gifts or services. The few who did would only use and abuse her. In fact, one such man got her pregnant, and he ran away from her immediately upon finding out. Now on top of all the adult responsibilities she had to learn to take on, she now had to be a single mother, too. Adult responsibilities and single motherhood cost a lot. She needed credit cards to keep up with the bills, which only left her with big credit card bills and bigger credit card debt. Sherry became depressed about life, and the best cure she knew of was drinking a few beers at the local bar, which only cured temporarily, but worsened the credit card debt.

One day, as Sherry watched the morning show, eating her breakfast before she drove off to work, the morning show host announced, “It was once thought of as a fantasy of science fiction movies and television shows, but this man has made the fantasy a reality. Ladies and gentlemen, I introduce you to the man who invented the flying car, Tim Dietrich!” Sherry’s head perked as she heard the name. She knew that name! Could it be that one kid from high school? How common could that name be? She watched as the man walked across the stage to shake the host’s hand. That was him! Sure, the body was slimmer and the face was acne free, but besides that, she could clearly tell it was him.

“So let’s start off with where it all began,” the host began. “Where did you get this idea?”

“From the Jetsons and Back to the Future of course!” Tim laughed at his own joke, and the host joined in laughing. “Seriously, though, I had always been fascinated with flying. As a kid, I made things that flew, from model airplanes to model rockets. When I got accepted into a university, I majored in aviation and aerodynamics. I even got my pilot’s license. I enjoyed flying my little plane, but I knew it was hard to get a pilot license, and I wanted everyone to enjoy this experience. So I thought of ways everyone could enjoy it. Since most adults have their driver’s license, why not turn the car into a plane?”

“Now I know many car companies had offered you a job so your patent could be used on their cars. Not only have American companies like Ford, Dodge and Chevy, but also international car companies liked Toyota, Honda and Hyundai. Why did you end up choosing Ford?” the host asked Tim.

“Besides the fact, that Ford offered to make me a billionaire, while all the others just offered to make me a millionaire?” Tim again laughed at himself, and the host laughed, too. “Well, I obviously wanted to keep it in the U.S.A. to keep jobs in the country and keep the American economy flowing. But for which company to choose, I chose Ford because when I think of Ford, I think of the inventor of the car. I think of my job as re-inventing the car, and I just wanted to keep Mr. Ford’s legacy alive.”

What? A billionaire? Sherry was in shock. Yeah, she knew Tim knew his science pretty well from science class, but he didn’t seem to be a nerdy genius, compared to other kids in school. She never thought someone big would come out of her small high school in her small town, either. It must have be nice, though, she thought, to not have to worry about money like she did.

“So how does it feel to be the most eligible bachelor in your home city of Detroit?” the host asked with a smirk. Tim laughed a long time to deal with the awkward question, and then he answered, “I haven’t thought about it. I think about when I land in Detroit this evening in my flying Porsche this afternoon,” Tim said with a wink.

Detroit? He lived in Detroit? Why, Sherry lived in a suburb right outside Detroit! Detroit was just an hour or two away from her home. Despite their old high school being miles away, they had somehow managed to be so close. Then, an idea entered in Sherry’s mind. She had to meet with Tim, or at least talk with him. Perhaps when they talked, a romantic spark might happen between the two. Or maybe they could just be friends, friends enough that Tim would have pity on her to help pay off her credit card debt. All during her work shift, Sherry planned what she would say and what she would do to win Tim over. The second her shift was over, she rushed home. She looked up Tim’s number. Only finding his office number, she gave the office number a call.

“Good day,” a female voice at the end of line spoke. “You’ve reached the office of Tim Dietrich. This is Angela, his secretary and person assistant speaking. How may I assist you?” Sherry was caught off guard by the female voice, expecting to hear Tim’s voice, but once she came to realize it was his administrative assistant, she spoke. “My name is Sherry McQueen.”

“Are you the one with CBS? ABC? NBC? FOX?” Angela quickly chimed in. “Sorry, with all these reporters asking for an interview, it’s hard to keep track of all of you.”

“No,” said Sherry. “I’m not with any news group.”

“Then are you one of the lab assistants working with Mr. Dietrich on one of his projects?” Angela asked.

“No, I’m not a lab assistant, either,” Sherry said. “I know him from high school.”

“Um, ok? Is this about a class reunion or something?” Angela asked, confused.

 
“No, I just want to see him, maybe over coffee?” Sherry said.

“Ma’am,” Angela said politely, “Mr. Dietrich does not have time for ‘coffee.’ If he wants a coffee, he has me run to get him one. He spends most of his time in his lab, inventing technology that will advance the human. When he’s not in the lab, he’s constantly in either in meetings or interviews. He barely has enough time for his hobbies, like going to the gym. If he can’t enjoy hobbies, he definitely does not have time for chit chat.”

“Well, can I at least talk to him over the phone?” Sherry asked. “Just mention it’s Sherry McQueen. He’ll remember!” Sherry insisted.

“Funny,” Angela said, trying to maintain professionalism. “I don’t ever remember Mr. Dietrich ever mentioning a Sherry McQueen in all the years I have worked for him. In fact, every time someone mentions high school, he becomes quiet and ignores the subject. If he doesn’t have any positive memories of high school, I don’t want to bring any bad memories back into his life. It might throw him off from his work.”
 
“Please!” Sherry insisted. “I’m in bad debt and I need help!”
 
“Ugh, not another one of you,” Angela groaned. Then her voice became stern. “Now listen here! I don’t know how many distant relatives or long lost friends have called asking for money, and you’re just another one of them. You should be ashamed of yourself, you…you…shameless hussy! Don’t call again, or I’ll have the police trace the line and arrest you for harassment. But if you need advice, I’ll give you some. Get a job! And if that’s not enough, get another one!” Angela hung up on her.
 

All Sherry could do was hang up the phone and sob uncontrollably.

The Really Real Jesus

Introduction

A few years ago, I came across a discussion between teens and college-aged young adults, doubting if the Pilgrims arrived in Plymouth, Massachusetts on the Mayflower in 1620. At first thought, this conversation might provoke someone to shake his or her head, thinking how stupid this generation is for not believing a historical event important to the American nation. After further thought, however, no one can really blame this generation for questioning history. College students today, when they went through elementary school, heard a story of George Washington cutting down a cherry tree and then reporting to his father, “I cannot tell a lie. I cut down the cherry tree. In reality, this story never happened. This story circulated when George Washington sat in as President of the United States, in order to teach early Americans that George Washington always spoke the truth in honesty. In elementary school, students learn that Cristopher Columbus discovered America in 1492. Then, in high school, the same students learn the Leif Ericson discovered American about 500 years earlier, and more closely to what we know as [the United States of] America (Leif Ericson landed in present-day Newfoundland; Cristopher Columbus landed in the present-day Caribbean island of Hispanola). No wonder this generation doubts history so much! And that’s history that only happened a few centuries ago. How much more ancient history, where the ancient historians rarely differed between their history and religious myths. For example, the Trojan War really happened between the Spartans and Trojans, but the Iliadrecords the Trojan War had Greek gods and goddesses appearing to heroes on both sides. A teen or young adult reading the Iliadcould doubt the Trojan War happened because Homer mentions Greek gods and goddesses involved in the war.

For if anyone wants to disprove the ancient Greek polytheism, all a person would have to do is take a hike up to Mount Olympus. When that person reaches the summit of Mount Olympus and observes no gods or goddesses there, he or she can easily conclude the Greek gods and goddesses do not exist. If the Greek gods and goddesses do not exist, then anyone can easily conclude that all the Greek myths, like the Iliad(even Greek history, like the Trojan War!), that have the Greek gods and goddesses in them cannot be trusted as historically accurate. Ancient religions, like the ancient Greek polytheism, has turned many people into atheists. Their atheism, which makes people believe God does not exist, makes people believe that any ancient writing mentioning a God must not be historically credible. Going further, if any of those ancient writings calls a person a God, both the writing and the person cannot be considered historically credible. In terms of Christianity, some atheists concludes that since God does not exist, Jesus does not exist, and if the Bible mentions Jesus existed as both God and man, they don’t take the Bible seriously as history. The atheist’s prejudices and presuppositions has led him or her astray. Jesus did exist outside the Bible, for many first century people, including hostile opponents, referenced Jesus. Even if the atheist admits Jesus existed, as some do, they state the Bible does not accurately record who Jesus is or what Jesus did. Therefore, the Christian cannot quit at proving Jesus existed in history. The Christian must insist that Jesus lived just as the Gospels record. This paper will not only prove Jesus existed, as the historical records demonstrate, but also that the Gospels accurately recorded the historical Jesus, using archaeology and the testimony of the early church fathers.

Background of the Need

Throughout history, especially recent history, everyone from atheists to so-called “intellectuals” have doubted if Jesus existed. If they do say Jesus existed, either willingly or reluctantly, they question if the Gospels historically record Jesus as he lived in the first century. The most recent and most famous is the Jesus Seminar. Consisting of Robert Funk and thirty of his friends, the Jesus Seminary sought to sort out the non-fiction Jesus and the fiction Jesus from the four canonical Gospels and the pseudapigraphal Gospel of Thomas. The members of the Jesus Seminar voted on the sayings of Jesus using four colored beads. Red meant Jesus definitely said it or something close to it. Pink represented Jesus probably said it, or said a somewhat similar idea, but multiple transmissions have left a little room for questioning it. Gray denoted that Jesus probably didn’t say it, but maybe it roughly represents an idea Jesus had. Black signified that Jesus never said, but rather the church sometime in history inserted that interpretation about Jesus. When all voting finished, only sixteen percent of events, seventeen percent of parables, and eighteen percent of the sayings of Jesus got the red bead vote to acknowledge them as historically accurate. The Jesus Seminar denied all of Gospels’ miracles, from the virgin birth to the resurrection. When the Jesus Seminary completed, they turned Jesus into a smart teacher and a social revolutionists, and nothing more. Therefore, Christians need apologetics that defend both Jesus as a real person in history and the Gospels as real historical accounts of the real Jesus.

Historical Records

Atheism denies the existence of God, but some atheists go even further and boldly proclaim that Jesus never existed either. Those atheists claim that only the New Testament mentions Jesus, and therefore they quickly conclude that Jesus never existed outside the imagination of the apostles. Such atheists, however, have concluded too quickly, and thus have concluded falsely, for historical records outside the Bible speak of Jesus.

Suetonius

Roman historians wrote about Jesus. Suetonius Tranquillus, an upper class lawyer, wrote a history of twelve Roman emperors after viewing the Roman archives of the emperors. Upon writing about Emperor Claudius, Suetonius records that Claudius removed the Jews from Rome. Suetonius says that Claudius removed the Jews because of their riots due to “the instigation of Chestus.” Christian scholars have good reason to believe that Chestus is a scribal error for Christ. Despite several records carefully recording the name of every Jew in Rome, not a single record writes down a Chestus in Rome. If Chestus did exist as a slave, as some skeptics have suggested, a good Roman historian, like Suetonius, would have provided some kind of biographical sketch explaining the minor character’s importance. No such biographical sketch exists, suggesting every commoner knew about the character. The error probably comes from the term Chrestiani, a profane name Romans gave Christians, including Suetonius. In fact, when Suetonius uses profanity in regards to Christians in an official historical recording, Suetonius displays his disdain towards Christians. Suetonius further demonstrates his hatred towards Christians when he later records that Christians follow an imaginary myth that causes misbehavior. Therefore, the Christian can conclude that Suetonius believed Jesus existed, for Suetonius blames the work of Jesus for upheaval between Jews and Christians in Rome.

Tacticus

In his final work, Roman senator and historian Cornelius Tacticus records Roman history from the fourteenth century A.D. to the sixty-eighth. Tacticus highlights the burning of Rome as an important event in Roman history. Tacticus records Nero started the fire, but blamed Christians as the cause. Tacticus then briefly describes Christians. He explains that Christians followed a Jesus of Nazareth, whom they called the Christ, who got executed by Pontius Pilate. Tacticus also looks down on Christians, for he calls them a people “hated for their abominable crimes” and later calls them “hateful of humanity.” Yet Tacticus too acknowledges Jesus. He calls Jesus a Christ, fully knowing the implications of the title. He recognizes Jesus as the founder of the movement the apostles expounded, commonly known as Christianity. He verifies for the Christian that Pontius Pilate had Jesus crucified. Furthermore, by mentioning Pontius Pilate, who many Roman historians mention, Tacticus puts Jesus in real history. Therefore, the Christian can conclude Tacticus knew Jesus existed, too.

Pliny the Younger

As a Roman senator and governor, Pliny the Younger took the time to investigate Christians in order to know how to deal with them. Pliny even went as far as sending out spies to spy on Christians to learn more about them. In a letter to Trajan, Pliny reports that the Christians recite a creed stating Jesus as Christ and God. Once again, Pliny recognizes the start of the Christian movement that had reached Rome. The movement started with Jesus. Pliny records a style of worship similar to that in Acts. Pliny even goes further and mentions that Christian worship included reciting a creed, declaring Jesus as God. He goes on to say their reverence for Christ as God does not allow them to worship another as God. In conclusion, Pliny not only recognized Jesus as real, but also recognized that some saw Jesus as God. Like Suetonius and Tacticus, Pliny stands as an enemy of Christianity, for he too declares the religion nothing more than a crazy superstition. Not even Pliny’s hostility towards Christianity could prevent him from denying the existence of Jesus.

Josephus

Not only did Roman historians record Jesus in history, but a Jewish historian did as well. Jewish historian Josephus speaks about Jesus in many of his works. Of all the works of Josephus, Testamonium Flavium and Antiquitiestalks the most about Jesus. The most famous passage comes from Testamonium Flavium. Even subtracting the material that has come into question, Joseph makes bold statements for a Jewish devotee. First, Josephus calls Jesus wise, and he also notes that other people knew Jesus as a wise man. Second, Josephus says Jesus does “surprising works,” possibly nodding at the miracles as supernatural acts. Third, Josephus states that Jesus faced opposition from Jewish leadership and Pontius. Fourth, Josephus confirms Jesus died on the cross at Pilate’s command. Fifth, although Josephus may not have believed it himself, he records the Christians believe Jesus rose from the dead, which led Christians to believe Jesus must be the Messiah. Josephus didn’t just believe Jesus existed, Joseph believed most of the Gospel claims as well.

Josephus mentions Jesus in Antiquities of the Jews, although indirectly. Antiquities of the Jews concludes with the close of Festus’s reign and Annas’s rule in the Sanhedrin. When Festus dies, Annas makes a power grab and starts making executive decisions. In one decision, Annas has James, “the brother of Jesus called Christ,” arrested, along with “certain others.” The certain others probably refers to Christians. To specify a common name such as James, Josephus identifies him as the brother of the Jesus. To specify a common name such as Jesus, Josephus identifies him as Jesus known as Christ. This name and title makes it clear that the original reader could have known about Jesus.

Rabbis

Not only did Jewish historians record Jesus in history, but Jewish rabbis did as well. Two of the most explicit mentions come from the transcripts of the Sanhedrin. These transcripts do more than just acknowledge Jesus existed. They acknowledge Jesus received the death penalty, and the time table matches the one found in the Gospels. Later on in the text, a rabbi declares Jesus practiced magic. This rabbi asserts he saw something supernatural happen, even if he does not call it a divine miracle. Although all the writings criticize and condemn Jesus, they prove Jesus existed nonetheless.

Archaeological Records

Previously, we have explored records and other writings in history that mention a Jesus of Nazareth, whom Christians believed to be the Messiah. Next, this paper will look at the Gospels as historically accurate. Before this paper can look at the Gospels, however, this paper needs to look at the archaeological record. The archaeological will not have any explicit mentions of Jesus by name. Rather, the archaeology will display the history, culture and geography of the first century Israel. In turn, when the Gospels display the same history, culture and geography, the reader can rest assured that the Gospel authors recorded the Gospels as accurate to history.

Coins

In Mark 12:13-17, the Pharisees and Herodians try to trap Jesus with a question about taxes. In this story, Jesus asks for a coin, and then he asks whose inscription is on the coin. They reply Caesar’s. Indeed, archaeology has revealed coins had Caesar’s name stamped on them. In fact, Caesars would use the coins to spread propaganda about themselves. Coin inscriptions would not only have the Caesar’s name, but also a title such as “Son of God” or “Son of a Divine one.” Such titles would remind the citizens that the previous Caesar, the current Caesar’s father, had reached a place among the gods, which verifies the current Caesar as the legitimate Caesar of Rome. Sometimes, if a Caesar pushed to make himself deity before death, he would change the coin inscription to something like “the holy one” or “the revered one.” Caesar Augustus, the emperor during the time of Jesus, had made this change by the time Jesus entered the ministry. Not only does Jesus reference this change in the Gospel of Mark, he might use it to make the Herodians, a political party supporting the Romans, to decide who is God: Jesus or Caesar.

Calendar

Another key inscription comes from a calendar found in Priene, a city located in western Asia Minor. The calendar made the birthday Caesar Augustus the new beginning to the year. The calendar writes that the Caesar’s birth is good news and that people should celebrate with good tidings toward each other. Both terms “good news” and “good tidings” comes the Greek word euanggelia, or gospel. What makes the Caesar’s birthday gospel, or good news, is that a god comes down to earth in human form. The inscription of the word gospel on the Roman calendar helps the Christian understand the use and importance of the word gospel in the four Gospels. Mark roughly borrows this Priene calendar inscription for the start of his Gospel. In Mark 1:1, Mark boldly proclaims that Caesar’s birth does not begin the good news, but rather the ministry of Jesus begins the good news. Altogether, the Romans used the idea of gospel just as much as the Christians living in the Roman Empire.

Urbanization of Galilee

Archaeology reveals that, during the ministry of Jesus, Herod Antipas, the tetrarch of Galilee, began building more in Galilee to make rural Galilee more urban. Antipas started by building two cities. One he named Sepphoris, and the other he named Tiberias. These two cities attracted many rural Galileans into city life, as well attracting many other people from faraway lands. With more people in the land, the demand for food and housing went up. In order to pay for food and housing, people would go into debt and have to work off their debt as tenants working in a farmer’s field. Jesus knew his currents events. Therefore, he taught lessons in Galilee that many Galileans could relate to. Such teachings consist of the parable of the wicked servant, the parable of the workers in the vineyard and the parable of the tenants. All these parables accurately describe life as a tenant farmer in first century Galilee.

Gospel Record

So far, we have explored records and other writings in history that mention a Jesus of Nazareth, whom Christians believed to be the Messiah. Most of these writings come from opponents of Jesus and opponents of Christianity. If Jesus didn’t exist, those opponents would have called the Christians out for believing in an imaginary person. Since these opponents take the time to refute Jesus, he must exist. Christians can use these writings to prove that Jesus existed to atheists. These accounts, however, can only get the Christian to prove Jesus existed. This leaves people to make any claim about Jesus they please. The Christian should not stop at proving the existence of Jesus. If the Christian believes the Bible is the inspired Word of God, then Jesus needs to be real like the Bible says. The Gospels writers took the time to record the words and actions of Jesus just as he lived them. Even as early as the church fathers, they could see the Gospels as historically accurate.

Four Distant Gospel Authors

Due to increased persecution in the 40s A.D., the apostles, including all four Gospel authors, split into four main mission groups to spread the Gospel. Paul and Luke most likely ministered to Greeks in Greece, as all Paul’s epistles hint. John most likely ministered in Asia Minor, as his seven letters in Revelation hints. Peter and Mark probably ministered together to the Romans in Rome. James and Matthew probably ministered to the Jews, wherever they were scattered. Looking at a map, the four Gospel authors wrote their Gospel accounts very far apart from each other, in both distance and time. This means they almost certainly did not collaborate with each other. Still, their stories concur with each other. Therefore, the reader can conclude these stories accurately account what Jesus did on this earth.

Against the Expectations

Some skeptical of the Gospels’ historical accuracy hypothesize the Gospel authors fictionalized Jesus in order to make him the Messiah. If the Gospel writers did fictionalize Jesus to make him the Christ, they did a terrible job. The first century Jews, including the Jewish Gospel writers Matthew, Mark and John, had expectations of the Messiah totally different to the character of Jesus. Still Matthew, Mark and John wrote down that contrary character Jesus displayed instead of writing down their dream Messiah. If the Gospel authors wanted their ideal Messiah, they would showed Jesus as a prophet who agreed with all the respected Pharisees’ and Sadducees’ religious teachings. Instead, they showed Jesus constantly in conflict with the Pharisees’ and Sadducees’ legalistic interpretation of the Law. If the Gospel writers wanted their model Christ, Jesus would heavily support a sovereign Israel and would fight Rome like Joshua fighting the Canaanites. Instead, Jesus never causes Rome any problems. In fact, he even helps a Roman centurion. The Gospel authors could have chosen to fictionalize Jesus to prove to Jews Jesus was truly the Messiah. Instead, they chose to accurately record Jesus as he lived in history, even if it meant losing Jewish followers.

Early Church Fathers

The early church fathers quickly accepted the books of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John as historically accurate accounts of the life of Jesus. The early church fathers had these four Gospels circulated throughout the whole Roman Empire. They quoted them freely in their letters. For example, Clement quotes all three synoptic Gospels in a letter to Corinth. Irenaeus writes that Polycarp, a disciple of John, read and quoted the Gospel of John constantly. When the early church fathers came together to write the creeds of the faith, they heavily relied on the four Gospels. When the creeds record that Pontius Pilate crucified Jesus, they align the crucifixion with history. Upon observing Christians, Pliny writes that the Christians read and recite the Gospels every Sunday. If the Christians read and recite the Gospels, they had to believe them to be true, including Jesus living. Justin the Martyr also observes Christians coming together to read a creed in his First Apology. Justin even writes down some of this creed. The creed not only records Jesus crucified during the time of Pontius Pilate, but also during Tiberius Caesar. All the early church fathers clearly conclude Jesus did exist as a real man in history, just as the four Gospels accurately record.

The Gnostic Gospels

The Gnostic gospels might sound like an odd choice to defend the historicity of the four true Gospels, but comparing the two, the Gnostic gospels reveal themselves to be fiction and the four true Gospels to be historical. The Gospel of Truth, written by the Gnostic Valentinus, does not record any action of Jesus, so it cannot be taken as historically true. The same goes for the Gospel of Thomas. The Gospel of Thomas does not have any narrative. While The Gospel of Thomas has several sayings that anyone can find in the other four canonical Gospels, it also contains saying heretical compared to the other Gospels. All this evidence adds up to a false Gospel. The Unknown Gospel, written in the second century, while free of heresy, consists of a compilation of verses from the other four canonical Gospels. This so-called gospel is merely a harmony of the true Gospels, furthermore attesting to the four Gospels historical accuracy. Same goes for the Gospel of Peter. The Gospel of Peter’s source comes from the three synoptic Gospels. Again, this attests to how the people of second century already saw the synoptic Gospels as historically accurate. The early church fathers quickly and easily rejected these Gnostic Gospels because they knew they were not historically credible. They knew they needed a historical account of the man Jesus, so that’s why they went with the historical Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John over the Gnostic Gospels.

Conclusion

 
Jesus did exist in history. Romans historians such as Suetonius, Tacticus and Pliny the Younger wrote about Jesus. Jewish historian Josephus wrote about Jesus. None of these historians would have sacrificed their credibility as historians for a fictional character, especially a fictional character whom they despised, as well as despising his followers. Jewish rabbis talk about Jesus in the Talmud. If Jesus wouldn’t have existed, they would have wrote down that in order to silence the new Christianity for falsely proclaiming a Messiah. Instead of denying his existence, they denied his words and deeds. Furthermore, Jesus existed in history exactly as the Gospels record it. They early church fathers immediately agreed with the testimony of these books, and they even supplemented it with more history. At the same time, the early church fathers quickly rejected the Gnostic gospels because they knew those books did not agree with Jesus either historically or theologically. All the Gospels match up with the exact same history and culture modern-day archaeology has revealed. The Gospel authors could not have collaborated their Gospels into pieces of fictions. They lived too far apart to collaborate. If they did collaborate, they did a horrible job, for they created a Messiah totally contrasting what the Jews declared the Messiah would be. Therefore, the Gospels must then accurate record the real, historical Jesus. If the atheists still wants to consider themselves intellectual, they must stop denying the existence of Jesus, as stated in the Gospels, for they are not doing themselves any favors.

 

Being the Attitude of Christ (Matthew 5:3-10)

Introduction

Matthew starts out Christ’s ministry in his gospel with the Sermon on the Mount. The Sermon on the Mount begins with the Beatitudes. Any Jew reading this book would have thought of Moses’s teaching of the Law of God from Mount Sinai. After the Beatitudes, Jesus goes on to say in verse seventeen that he has not come to abolish the Law or the prophets, but he has come to fulfill them. Jesus knew that a Jew shouldn’t just know the Law, but a good, godly Jew should also follow it. If Jesus gives his audience on the Sermon on the Mount a “new law,” then Jesus needs to fulfill that law like he does with the Old Testament Law. Matthew takes the time to show his Jewish readers that Jesus follows the Sermon on the Mount in his Gospel. This paper will look specifically at how Jesus follows the Beatitudes.

The Poor in Spirit

“Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” –Matthew 5:3

Readers must understand that poor in spirit in no way means a weak faith or an absent faith. Readers must also understand that poor in spirit goes beyond just being physically poor. Indeed, Matthew probably draws the idea “poor in the spirit” from the image of a poor person. From the Old Testament, Jews, like Matthew, made a correlation between obedience and financial blessing. In the Jewish mind, if God granted someone great riches, that person must have done something righteous or holy. On the other hand, if someone had no money, according to Jews, that person must have sinned, and God cursed that person for doing so. Jews would associate the term “poor” with the mental image of a beggar begging. Matthew takes it a step further. By turning “poor” into “poor in spirit,” Matthew paints a picture of a person begging God for everything because they depend on God for everything. They are spiritually bankrupt and thus also spiritually powerless. It means that person cannot please God on his or her own. Someone who is poor in spirit quickly confesses and repents when he or she sins and falls short of the glory of God. The poor in spirit stand unique in the Beatitudes because their blessing happens in the present, whereas the other Beatitudes talk about a future promise. These people already have the mindset of the kingdom of heaven because in the kingdom of heaven, everybody depends on God for everything.

Jesus lived as one who is poor in spirit while on the earth. The readers of Matthew can clearly see Jesus as poor in spirit when reading about the miracles. Instead of using his powers as deity, Jesus models to his disciples how they, as humans, can do miracles. It all comes down to trusting in God and asking for his power.

Those who Mourn

“Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted.” –Matthew 5:4

People mourn over evil that has happened in the world. The evil that happens in the world comes from sin. Evil that causes mourning sometimes derives from the immediate results of personal, individual sins, while at other times the evil derives from social injustice. Their comfort will come when Jesus completely removes sin and sets up the perfect kingdom of heaven. Perhaps Matthew even intended to connect those who mourn to the poor in spirit. A person, when poor in spirit, becomes sorrowful, and thus mourns. Therefore, verses three and four parallel each other, for mourning results from one acknowledging being poor in spirit. Their comfort comes when God provides for them. Mourning might also result when a person sees how much the kingdom of heavens seeks, and how man has not reached it. These people will receive consolation when Jesus establishes the kingdom of God on earth, and everyone can reach its standards.

Matthew shows a sorrowful Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane. In Matthew 26:37, Matthew explicitly states Jesus as “sorrowful and troubled.” Then, in Matthew 26:38, Matthew records Jesus telling Peter, James and John, “My soul is very sorrowful, even to death; remain here, and watch with me.” With this repetition, Matthew reiterates the importance of Christ’s emotional state. Although necessary for God’s plan of man’s salvation, the agony of facing the most painful death in the world brought Jesus to sorrow. Because of Christ’s sorrow, man can seek comfort in knowing he can receive salvation.

The Meek

“Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth.” –Matthew 5:5

The Greek word translated “meek” in Matthew 5:5, praeis, exists only three other times in the New Testament, two of them in Matthew. In the other instances, praeis gets translated “gentle” or “humble.” The English term “meek” further adds the idea of a person who is non-aggressive. Meek does not mean weak, but instead, it means practicing self-control over the strength that a person has. If someone humbles himself or herself to be gentle, that person might fear he or she allows others to use or abuse them. Not true, Jesus says. Jesus promises them the earth. The Jews of the first century might have thought they had to take Israel back from the Romans by force. Jesus turns the kingdom upside down on this Jewish thinking. One day, Jesus will take all the land for himself, and he will give it to those who gently humbled themselves.

As stated earlier, praeisonly appears three more times in the New Testament; two of them appear in Matthew, besides the Sermon on the Mount appearance. Both uses in Matthew describe Jesus. In Matthew 11:29, Jesus invites the weary and heavy burdened to find rest in him, for Jesus is “gentle [praeis] and lowly in heart.” In Matthew 21:5, when Jesus triumphantly enters Jerusalem, Matthew quotes Zechariah 9:9, which says, “Behold, your king is coming to you, humble [praeis], and mounted on a donkey, on a colt, the foal of a beast of burden.” Although Matthew quotes the Septuagint, Matthew sees a meek Christ, and so he quotes Zechariah to show his Jewish audience that a meek Jesus fulfills the prophecy of a meek Christ.

Those who Hunger and Thirst for Righteousness

“Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be satisfied.” –Matthew 5:6
 
Just like with the poor in spirit, Jesus takes a physical quality, hunger and thirst, and spiritualizes it to give a deeper meaning. It does include a basic need for food, but it then goes deeper than that. Just as hungry person seeks food and a thirsty person seeks drink, so someone who hunger and thirsts for righteousness seeks righteousness and justice. They aim to live in a community that resembles Eden before the Fall, just as God created humans to live in. Jesus promises those who hunger and thirst that they will be satisfied. When Jesus establishes the kingdom of heaven, they will have their fill in righteousness and justice, for the kingdom of heaven has nothing but righteousness and justice.

Jesus knew his spiritual hunger needed to be greater than his physical hunger. When Satan tempted Jesus to turn stones into bread, Jesus did not. Instead of sinning in order to fill his stomach, Jesus pursued righteousness and did not sin, even it meant not filling his stomach.

The Merciful

“Blessed are the merciful, for they shall receive mercy.” –Matthew 5:7

Being merciful can mean not dealing bitterly with someone or not disciplining someone who deserves it, but being merciful also extends to randomly acting kindly to someone for no just reason. Yet the random acts of kindness cannot be occasional, for a merciful person makes giving mercy a lifestyle choice. Being merciful includes compassion, forgiveness and generosity. In return, God returns the mercy to them throughout their lives, all the way up to the Judgment Day. Perhaps people become merciful because they recognize they need God to have mercy on themselves for sinning.

The Greek word translated here as merciful, eleemones, only appears in Matthew 5:7 and Hebrews 2:17, a verse which describes Jesus.<!–[if supportFields]> ADDIN EN.CITE Morris19921051051056Morris, LeonThe Gospel according to Matthew

94-103

1992Grand Rapids, Mich.; Leicester, EnglandWilliam B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. ; Inter-Varsity Press0802836968 9780802836960 0851113389 9780851113388English<![endif]–><!–[if supportFields]><![endif]–> Therefore, Jesus needs to become the Christian’s role model for being merciful. Once again, Matthew shows a merciful Jesus. In Matthew 9:27-31, Jesus has mercy when he stops in route to his next destination in order to help blind men in the road see. In Matthew 15:21-28, Jesus extends mercy to a Gentile woman when he healed the woman’s daughter, although his ministry focused on the Jews. In Matthew 17:14-21, Jesus exorcises a demon out of a man’s son when the disciples could not do it. If the reader does not believe these miracles as acts of mercy, the reader should re-read the stories, for each story has the main character cry out to Jesus for mercy. Jesus hears their pleas for mercy, and he replies in mercy.

The Pure in Heart
 
“Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God.” –Matthew 5:8

Pure refers to cleanliness, and heart refers to the non-material part of the person. Put together, Jesus blesses one who cleanses on the inside like Jews ritually clean the outside. It rejects sin, impurity and filth. In its place goes righteousness and holiness. This purification can only come from depending on God for everything and following Jesus. Those who can obtain this purity shall see God. Perhaps when Jesus mentioned seeing God, the Jewish audience thought about holy men in the Old Testament, who got to see a little of God and became fully illuminated. The pure in heart in the New Testament will get the see God better and more fully, for when they see God, they will see him in his presence. This accounts for the pure in heart’s holiness, for only holy people can stand in the presence of a holy God.

Jesus did not have to purify himself of sin, for Jesus had no sin in him. Jesus came close to sin when he faced temptation in Matthew 4. When facing temptations by Satan, Jesus demonstrated purity in heart. He rejected Satan’s temptations that would make him impure and unclean. Instead, he chose righteousness and holiness, quoting Scriptures that move him closer to righteousness and holiness and away from sin. All those Scriptures reminded Jesus, Satan, and the readers to seek God only, follow God only and worship God only.

The Peacemakers

“Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God.” –Matthew 5:9

Notice Jesus says “the peacemakers” and not something else, like “the peaceful” or “those at peace.” Peacemakers emphasize making peace, not just thinking about it or talking about it. Peacemaking does, however, start internally. Once peace lays a foundation in the heart of a person, it will flow out in his or her physical actions. The peacemakers are the only Beatitude that Jesus give a title, the title being the sons of God. A person called the son of God becomes a son a God. He or she gets adopted into God’s family. God treats that person as if the person is family. God promises all in his family an inheritance in the kingdom of heaven. The kingdom of heaven is a peaceable kingdom. Naturally, it would only make sense for a peacemaker to inherit a peaceable kingdom.

Matthew 21:1-17 displays Jesus as a peacemaker. In Matthew 21:1-11, Jesus enters Jerusalem, riding on a donkey. When a king entered a city riding on a donkey, it meant he came in peace. From his entrance into Jerusalem, Jesus made it clear he came in peace. Despite the crowds that rally to welcome Jesus, no riots or insurrections occur. In Matthew 21:12-13, Jesus sees the merchants and money changers, and he becomes angry with a righteous anger. He expels the merchants and overturns the money changing tables. Peacemaking involves social justice. Jesus saw a social injustice happening with the merchants and moneychangers. Neither one of them would allow the poor to worship God properly. Jesus knew that wasn’t right, so he removed it all from his Father’s temple. Then, in Matthew 21:14, Jesus goes back to performing miracles. By performing miracles, he continued to return the shalom, the peace that originates back in the perfect Garden of Eden, where everything was as it should be. Peacemakers seek to return life on earth back to life in the Garden.

Those who are Persecuted for Righteousness’s Sake

“Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” –Matthew 5:10

Jesus rightfully saves the blessing for the persecuted last, for the persecution might come as a result of following all the other beatitudes. The persecution may also come from other forms of righteous living, but the persecution must come as a result of righteous living, or else God will not bless it. The Beatitudes come full circle with the promise for righteous persecution, for the promise is the same promise for the poor in spirit. Like the poor in spirit, those persecuted for righteousness’s sake receive the kingdom of heaven. God provides the kingdom of heaven for these people so they will have a place where they will no longer receive persecution. Instead, they will live in a place where everyone lives righteously like they do.

When Matthew tells his side of the crucifixion events, Matthew wants the reader to clearly see a Jesus persecuted for righteousness’s sake. When Christians talk about Jesus on the cross, they must include all aspects and images Jesus on the cross gives, which definitely includes penal substitution, but also includes Christ the victor just as much. When Jesus taught about true way to follow the Law, his teachings never went over well with the Pharisees and other Jewish leaders. Their hardened hearts towards his teachings, along with jealousy, drove them to want to send Jesus to the cross. Jesus was persecuted and died because he taught true righteousness. At the same time, the penal substation view of the cross is another death for righteousness’s sake. Jesus died on the cross, so we could become righteous.

Conclusion
 
Jesus truly lived as an example to Christians everywhere. Not only did he start his ministry teaching people how to live, but he lived them out himself. Matthew must have believed the Beatitudes were the most important teaching of Jesus, for not only does Matthew start out Christ’s ministry with the Beatitudes, but he makes sure everyone reading his Gospel can see Jesus live them out. If Christians truly want to live like Christ, they must have the attitude of  Christ, which are the Beatitudes.

The Pharisee and The Tax Collector (Part 2): The Tax Collector

Introduction

This post continues the two-part study on the Parable of the Pharisee and the Tax Collector. The last post looked at the Pharisee and his side of the story. This post will look at the tax collector and his side of the story. I hope you have already re-read the parable in another Bible version (preferably a dynamic equivalency if you already read a literal translation) because we are diving right into their cultural context: their personalities as individuals, how their communities impacted society, and the cultural stigma that went with them.

The Cultural Account

I know I don’t have to ask what thoughts are feelings arise when you hear “tax collector.” It doesn’t matter if you live in the 1stcentury or 21st century, nobody likes a tax collector. Even on an episode of Who Wants to be a Millionaire?, when Regis asked the contestant his occupation, and the contestant answered, “a collector for the Internal Revenue Service,” the audience immediately booed him. The negative connotation of the tax collector most likely comes from viewing the tax collector as someone taking away our hard earned money. People feel like they worked hard to get that money, and no one should have the right to take from them. This feeling probably did not change from 1stcentury to 21st century. Yet the person living in the 21stcentury should appreciate the 21st century tax collector because the 21st century tax collector has standards, boundaries, ethics and morals. The 1st century tax collector had no such thing.

In the 1st century cultural context of the New Testament, tax collectors of the Roman Empire could be of any race or ethnicity, but they all worked for the Roman Empire, which made them appear more as sympathizers to the Romans rather than citizens of their own race and ethnicity.

The Roman Empire required tax collectors to collect three main taxes: an annual land tax, an annual income tax and customs or poll tax. In addition, sometimes local taxes were levied by the local rulers by the whim of authority. Furthermore, the Roman Empire allowed tax collectors to collect extra for their salary. This too was at the whim of the tax collector. He collected as much as he thought he deserved. Individually and altogether, taxes were generally high. Josephus records in Jewish Antiquities the land tax for farmers in Sidon was 25% of the sown produce! Clearly the Roman Empire did not help the cultural view of tax collectors.

As if the Roman Empire did not help the view of tax collectors, tax collectors really didn’t help themselves either. Tax collectors could get nasty when it came to collecting their taxes. Some tortured and killed debtors and those close to the debtors in order to get their money. Philo writes in Special Laws, “When some of [the tax collector’s] debtors whose default was clearly due to poverty took flight in fear of the fatal consequences of his vengeance, [the tax collector] carried off by force their womenfolk and children and parents and their other relatives and beat and subjected them to every kind of outrage and contumely in order to make them either tell him the whereabouts of the fugitive or discharge his debt themselves.” Some tax collectors also committed fraud on a regular basis. Philo writes in Embassy to Gaius, “Capito is the tax-collector for Judaea and cherishes a spite against the population. When he came there he was a poor man but by his rapacity [covetousness] and peculation [embezzlement] he has amassed much wealth in various forms.” In Sanhedrin 25b, “At first they thought that they [tax collectors and publicans] collected no more than the legally imposed tax. But when it was seen that they overcharged, they were disqualified.” These atrocities gave tax collectors, even the good ones, a bad name.

Therefore, people hated tax collectors and saw them a low lifes. Jewish rabbis grouped them with other low lifes, like thieves, robbers, murderers, adulterers and pimps. Some rabbis even claimed God would punish tax collectors with leprosy. Jews also saw tax collectors as ceremonially unclean and traitors to Judaism. Jews even used the term “tax collector” as a derogatory term to call people. Not only did the Jews see tax collectors as low lifes, Romans also saw them as lesser people. In Cicero’s Duties, Cicero writes a list of occupations, with the most gentlemen-like at the top and the most vulgar at the bottom. Tax collectors fall all the way to the bottom. Nobody liked a tax collector.

Since the Jews looked down on tax collectors, the Jews treated down tax collectors. Tax collectors were not allowed to be Pharisees until they quit their job. In court, they could not be judges, nor could their testimony could be used. Jeremias sums it up best in Jerusalem, “[A tax collector] was deprived of civil and political rights to which every Israelite had claim, even those such as bastards who were of seriously blemished descent.” The Jews made it clear in their behavior how much they disliked the tax collectors. While the job might have paid well, becoming a tax collector made it a tough ride in life socially.

The Biblical Account

Tax collectors are clearly visible in the Gospel presence. They occur 25 times in the Gospel: 9 times in Matthew, 4 times in Mark, 12 times in Luke, 0 times in John. It’s not that John was against Christ’s actions toward tax collectors, but rather John, being the last gospel, thought the other Gospel writers covered it enough. These occurrences cover 11 different episodes. We don’t have the time fully exegete all 11 different episodes, but we will cover some main topics in which Jesus encounters tax collectors and will connect them to cultural context.

Jesus Uses It As A Derogatory Term

Matthew 5:46 ESV-

“For if you love those who love you, what reward do you have? Do not even the tax collectors do the same?”

Matthew 18:17 ESV-

“If he refuses to listen to them, tell it to the church. And if he refuses to listen even to the church, let him be to you as a Gentile and a tax collector.”

Does it surprise you these are quotes from Jesus? If Jesus used the term “tax collector” as a derogatory term, does that mean Jesus had the same low, negative view of tax collectors? I think not. Look at both the cultural context and the literary context. Notice how both quotes come from the book of Matthew. Matthew is Jew writing to Jews. The cultural account teaches that the Jews hated the tax collectors more than anyone else. The Jews let tax collectors know how hated they were in both their words and actions. In both of these quotes, Jesus uses this cultural knowledge to turn the Jews’ world and the kingdom of God upside down on the Jews. In Matthew 5:46, Jesus uses the tax collectors’ low view to teach the importance of loving everyone, including your enemies. If even those of the lowest stature can love those that love them, then those who deem themselves as more moral and more upright must go a step above just loving those who love them. In Matthew 18:17, Jesus uses the tax collectors’ low standing to explain the severity of someone in the church who will not heed to church discipline. Yet at the same time with Matthew 18:17, perhaps the point of comparing an unrepentant church member to a tax collector was to get across that both need God’s love and God’s salvation, and that everyone needs God’s love and God’s salvation.

Tax Collectors are the Object of the Lost/Found Parables

Luke 15:1,2 ESV-

Now the tax collectors and sinners were all drawing near to hear him. And the Pharisees and the scribes grumbled, saying, “This man receives sinners and eats with them.”

Sadly, Christians have a habit of separating these 3 parables when they really do belong together (technically, the 2 parables in Luke 16 most likely go with the 3 parables in Luke 15 too, but that’s a different discussion for a later time). Sadly, Christians also forget the importance of the first two introductory verses in Luke 15. The introductory verses, together with the parables, explain why Jesus receives and eats with tax collectors and sinners. The parables emphasize the joy of something, or someone, lost being found. In the same way, Jesus rejoices over sinners coming to salvation. If Jesus rejoices over sinners coming to salvation, godly men and women should do the same. The problem is that the Jewish religious leaders did not. They judged and condemned the tax collectors and sinners instead of helping them to salvation. Jesus emphasizes this point at the end of the prodigal son parable. The older brother represents the Jewish leadership because they are always with the Father, and yet they did not know the Father. If they would have known the Father, they too would work with tax collectors and sinners to help them come to repentance.

Jesus Calls A Tax Collector To Be A Disciple

Of the 12 disciples, the Gospels record Jesus specifically calling 5 of them. One of those is Levi, whom is known better as Matthew. All 3 synoptic Gospels record this event: Matthew 9:9-11, Mark 2:14-16 and Luke 5:27-30. The original Greek literally calls Matthew a “tax gatherer.” This means that Matthew actually collected the 3 taxes mentioned above: the annual income tax, the annual land tax and the customs/poll tax. More specifically, Matthew is the custom house official. This means that Matthew placed tax on whatever he wanted and then collected it. Jesus calling a tax collector to be a disciple must have been a shock to everyone, especially the Jewish religious leaders. Remember that everyone thought tax collecting was the most despicable and least moral job a person could have. This job was so looked down on that the Pharisees required tax collectors to quit their job in order to take any kind of religious job. Jesus turned their world upside down. Instead of choosing his disciples as the best of the best, he chose them as the worse of the worse. Jesus did not look for those who were already good and moral; he wanted those who wanted to learn and work on their lives. This is why Jesus says in all 3 synoptic Gospels something along the lines of, “It is not the healthy that need a doctor, but the sick. I did not come for the righteous, but for sinners.”

Jesus Ate With Tax Collectors

When all 3 synoptic Gospels tell the story of Jesus calling Matthew, they also recall Jesus going to eat with Matthew and his fellow tax collector friends. Furthermore, in Luke 19:5-7, Jesus goes to the home of Zacchaeus, another tax collector. Remember that in this culture dining with someone at their house means acceptance, reconciliation and a close relationship. This is why people become upset when they see Jesus go into the house of Zacchaeus to eat with him. Jesus reminds them of what he said to Matthew. In Luke 19:10, Jesus says, “For the Son of Man came to seek and to save the lost.” The people should not scoff at Jesus hanging out with sinners because that’s what Jesus came for: bringing sinners to repentance.

Conclusion
 
I purposely placed those Biblical accounts in that order so you can see a common, building theme. The theme climaxes with Luke 19:10. Christ’s yearning was for sinners to come to God. So Jesus came down from heaven so that sinners may one day be lifted up to see God face-to-face and live with him forever. Now throw in what I said about what Jesus was doing with borrowing the Jews’ derogatory term. By purposely targeting someone looked down on in Jewish society, Jesus made a bold statement to the Jews. No one can be so stooped down in sin that he or she cannot be saved. Jesus wants to love everyone and wants everyone to repent of sin and come to Him. If Jesus is a friend of tax collectors, he’ll be a friend of me.

Acknowledgement

I am eternally grateful to Dr. Dough Buckwalter, New Testament professor at Evangelical Seminary, for the original texts and originally sources.

John: A Story About The Son of God

Sometimes when Christians zoom in and focus on one verse, they lose the context of the chapter, or even the paragraph the verse is in. Sometimes when Christians zoom in and focus on one chapter, they lose the context of the whole book. I know through my studies of John that when we focused on one chapter of John, it might be easy only think about what that chapter is saying and not even consider the context of the whole book of John. It would be a shame if we did that because most likely that chapter contributes the book’s overall message, and if we don’t think about the book’s overall message, we might very well miss the true meaning of the chapter. I close my devotional commentary on John by stepping back, zooming out, and looking at the whole picture of John. I’ll start by reviewing the introductory material to John, then we’ll outline John, and from that we’ll pull out theological pictures, themes and messages.

Before we go any further, I will put a disclaimer by saying that this will be nothing like my devotional commentary on Mark. Mark is not like John. Mark is an epic story; John is not. Let me be clear on what I am saying. Yes, John is a story, in the sense it is written in narrative form. I believe John does this in order to demonstrate what he is writing is historical truth (history in the 1st century was written like a story). But as I will remind you in the introductory review, John is a supplemental Gospel. And just like the supplemental appendixes to any book, both fictional and non-fictional books, the supplemental appendixes are not meant to tell a good story, but are meant to give extra information to help the reader understand the book’s concepts further. That is what John is trying to do. He’s not trying to tell a good story to get the reader to come to faith. Instead, John is trying to give extra information about the history of Jesus to persuade the reader to come to faith (or continue faith). So think of John less as a story, and more like a persuasive essay. That will also help with the introductory material.

Speaking of introductory material, let’s move on to the introductory material. Now I’m not going to spend time defending all of it. If you want a defense of all these, go back to “John 0: An Introduction” where we talked about this. If you don’t want to read it [again], just accept what I have said as truth. Remember, the introductory information is what reporters seek when asking questions. This is the who, whom, what, where, when, why, and how. To be more specific, the answers to these question will be the author, the audience, the historical occasion, the location, the date, the purpose and the structure.

THE AUTHOR (WHO): John
THE AUDIENCE (WHOM): Christians
THE LOCATION (WHERE): Written in Ephesus, Takes Place Mostly in Judea
THE DATE (WHEN): 85-95 AD
THE HISTORICAL OCCASION (WHAT): Gnosticism and other pseudo-Christianity cults were preaching that Jesus was only a man, and wasn’t God.
THE PURPOSE (WHY): John wrote the book of John to persuade Christians to continue believing Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God.
THE STRUCTURE (HOW): A Supplemental Gospel

Now if you remember my explanation on the structure (how), I told you that it could both/either the writing style and/or method, or it can be an outline. In my review of the introductory material, I simply told you the writing style. The Gospel of John is a supplemental Gospel. But I do also want to outline the book for you. At Bible College, I was taught that a good start to outlining a Bible Book is to first write sentence summaries on the paragraphs, and then group the similar paragraphs together. But I don’t have the time to write paragraph summaries, and you probably don’t have the time to read paragraph summaries. So for simplicity’s sake, I am going to write a sentence summary for each chapter. Then we will combine similar chapter summaries together to draw up an outline. Below are the sentence summaries. The bullet number is the chapter number. Also, I will sometimes “cheat” on the sentence summaries. If I cannot write a one-sentence summary without making a ridiculously long run-on, I will make it two or three sentences.

1. Jesus is God because He was with God at the beginning, He created the universe and He gives life. Then 5 men testify Jesus is God: John the Baptist, John the Disciple, Andrew, Philip and Nathanael
2. Christ’s disciples believe Jesus is the Christ and Son of God through His first miracle of turning water to wine and through the cleansing of the temple.
3. Nicodemus moves from the darkness of sin to the True Light, Jesus Christ, because Nicodemus believes in Jesus as the Son of God.
4. Jesus evangelizes the Gospel as Living Water to the Samaritan Woman at the well, and she believes that Jesus is the Christ and the Son of God.
5. Jesus points out 4 testimonies that demonstrate Jesus is God the Son: God the Father, John the Baptist, Old Testament Scriptures, miracles/miraculous signs
6. Jesus demonstrates that He is the Bread of Life, an “I AM” statement, by Feeding over 5,000 people. Many followers turn away from Jesus because they cannot accept his hard teachings, but the disciples stick with Jesus because they believe Jesus is the Holy God.
7. The people are skeptic about Jesus, split between either “a good teacher” or “a deceiver,” but few will commit to Jesus as the Son of God. Jesus calls the people to a stronger faith, one that recognizes Jesus as the Christ and/or the Son of God.
8. Jesus demonstrates He is God because uses 2 “I AM” statements, which link back to God’s name, Yahweh, or “I AM WHO I AM.”
9. Jesus demonstrates that He is the Light of the World, an “I AM” statement, by giving light to a blind man. The miracle shows that those who are in sin are in darkness because they do not have the Light of the World.
10. Jesus teaches that He is the good shepherd, an “I AM” statement, and a biblical allusion to God that all the Jewish people will recognize, thanks to Psalm 23.
11. Jesus demonstrates that He is the Resurrection and the Life, an “I AM” statement, by raising Lazarus from the dead.
12. As Jesus enters Jerusalem, the Jewish form a parade and declare that Jesus is the Son of David and the King of Israel, titles only for the Messiah. John shows the reader Scripture foretelling of this event, further proof that Jesus is the Christ.
13. Christ’s betrayer is identified, and this further proves Jesus is the Messiah because Old Testament Scriptures, such as Psalm 41:9, foretell of the Messiah having a betrayer.
14. Jesus demonstrates He is God by teaching He is the only way to the father, as well as the only way to even see the Father, using an “I AM” statement. Jesus also displays Himself as the God the Son by depicting the Trinity, with the Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
15. Jesus demonstrates that He is God by teaching that He is the Vine (an “I AM” statement), the Father is the Gardener, and the Christians are the branches.
16. Jesus is shown as God the Son because He sends God the Holy Spirit from God the Father.
17. Jesus is displayed as the Son of God because He calls God His Father in an intimate way.
18. Jesus shows that He is in control of the Jewish trials because God is the one who gives the Jewish leaders the authority they are in.
19. Jesus shows that He is in control because He explains to Pilate that the only reason why Pilate is in charge is because God gave him authority. Jesus also is seen as the Christ because He fulfills prophecy and serves as Penal Substitution for sin.
20. Jesus rises from the dead, and His disciples and followers go from calling Jesus “Rabbi” and “Teacher” to “Lord” and “God.” For the disciples, the resurrection was the ultimate sign Jesus was the Messiah and Son of God.
21. The large catch of large fish is a post-resurrection miracle that further proves to the disciples that Jesus is the Lord God.

Alright, the next step is to group them together into similar themes or similar messages. Now I was taught a good outlines has neither too many points nor too few points, or a good outline has neither too many section or too few sections. This became a problem for because of the latter. Every time I tried to outline it, I ended up shoving a bunch of chapters into a single section. But I tried to look past this. I didn’t want a hermeneutical rule to be stronger than good theology. Maybe if the theology is good, it doesn’t matter if the hermeneutical rule is broken. So the first one I tried was to group was by Christ’s “life stages,” or by time. Once again, the bullet numbers are the chapter numbers.

Outlined by the Life of Christ
1-10. The Ministry of the Christ (3-4 years)
11. Transition from the Ministry to the Passion (1-2 days)
12-21. The Passion of the Christ (1 week)

This outline has many strengths, of because of the many strengths, this one is the one I like the most, despite its shortcomings. One of its biggest strengths is that it cuts the Gospel of John in half, and the halfway point is the perfect transition. Another good sign of an outline is that it is no lop-sided, and this outline definitely does not lop-side the Gospel of John. The Ministry of the Christ is 10 chapters long. The Passion of the Christ is 10 chapters longs. That one chapter that serves as the halfway marker is the Resurrection of Lazarus. The Resurrection of Lazarus is part of The Ministry of Christ because He is serving people to bring them to believe in Him. The Resurrection of Lazarus also is part of The Passion of the Christ because it foreshows that Jesus will die and be raised up. Another reason I like this outline is because you could rename the section titles, and they would still contain the same chapters. For example, you could name the outline “Outlined by Location.” Chapters 1-10 would be labeled “Israel” because Jesus ministers in Judea, Samaria and Galilee. Chapter 11 would be labeled “Perea” because the Resurrection of Lazarus takes place in Perea. Chapters 12-21 would be labeled “Jerusalem” because all 10 chapters (for the most part) take place in Jerusalem only. Another example would be renaming the outline “Outlined by Time” Chapters 1-10 is “The Years,” Chapter 11 is “Day,” Chapter 12-21 is “week.” A third reason I like this outline is that all the sections are consistant with John’s purpose. All the sections portray Jesus as the Christ and the Son of God. What are the problems with this outline? Like I said above, it bunches too many chapters into one section. 10 chapters for one section is a lot, especially for a book with 21 chapters. On a similar note, 1 chapter is too small for a section, especially if the other 2 sections have ten chapters. Speaking of an unbalance, another fault is the time is unbalanced. There’s not a good balance if you go from years, to days, to weeks. If you were to go back the “location outline,” the balance within “Israel” and “Jerusalem” is not good either. Only once does Jesus go to Samaria in “Israel.” And a couple times in “Jerusalem” Jesus is outside of Jerusalem, like in Bethany or by the Sea of Galilee. But I still feel like this is nit-picky, and next to the pros of the outline, the cons seem like nothing.

Still, I tried to think up of a way outline this Gospel in another way. On one hand, if my biggest problem with the first outline was that the sections were too big, I had to figure out a way to make the sections smaller. On the other hand, if one of the things I liked about the previous outline was the transition in chapter 11, so I had to figure out a way to keep it. The best way I could think of keeping the transition was to think up another transition similar to the one in chapter 11. In order to do this, I looked at different interpretations and different lessons learned from John 11. By doing so, I came up with an outline that outlines the Gospel Book by the numbers of followers Jesus had. I came up with this.

Outline by Number of Followers
1-5. Thousands of followers (5,000+)
6. Transition from thousands of followers (5,000+) to tens of followers (70-90)
7-10. Tens of followers (70-90)
11. Transition from tens of followers (70-90) to hundreds of followers (100-600)
12-21. Hundreds of followers (100-600)

This outline does need a bit more explaining. As you can guess, one way I looked at story of the Resurrection of Lazarus was at the great increase of followers. That immediately reminded me of another great change of numbers when it came to Christ’s followers. It wasn’t an increase, but a decrease. In chapter 6, many followers leave because they cannot accept Christ’s hard teachings. So I tried to see this as 2 transitions. While the generic titles of sections, such as “tens,” hundreds,” and “thousands” do not need great explaining, maybe the more specific numbers do. But before I explain them, let me say these are rough estimates, which means they were rounded. The “thousands” number of “5,000+” I got from the Feeding of the 5,000, obviously. I chose “70-90” for the tens because we know at this point in the Life of Christ Jesus sends out 72 disciples to minister to the people (see Luke 10) but it can’t be in the hundreds. For the “hundreds” I chose “100-600” because we know Jesus appeared to over 500 believers after the resurrection (see 1 Corinthians 15) but we also know there are only 120 in Jerusalem during Pentecost (see Acts 2). This outline has strengths. First, it gives us more sections. We went from 3 sections to 5 sections. Second, it gives us a better spread of chapters…well, at least better than the last outline. Yet each strength of this outlines has weaknesses, and then some more. First, while it gives us more sections, it doesn’t give us too many more sections. 3 sections to 5 sections is not a big change. On that note, the sections don’t exactly divide the material better. For starters, it only gets rid of one of the big sections of 10 chapters, but it also leaves the other big section of 10 chapters. Next, the chapter divisions are far from even. If written out, the chapter divisions would be 5-1-4-1-10. Even without the transition chapters, it’s 5-4-10. These are far from even. At least the last outline was closer to even. As I argued with chapter 11 above, chapter 6 alone is not good enough to be its own section, even if it is 70 verses long. As I stated with one of the negatives with the last outline, these titles don’t fully do a good. In chapter 1, Jesus only has 5-6 followers. In the first half of chapter 2, Jesus has 5-13 followers. Chapter 1 and half of chapter 2 is far from thousands of followers. My last argument against it would be the theology behind it. Did Jesus ever measure His ministry’s success by number of followers? Far from it. It would seem like more often Jesus called His followers to be more sincere and serious about their faith, even if it mean losing several followers. If Jesus didn’t measure His ministry by His followers, then neither shall we.

Running out of ideas, I “cheated” and I turned to commentaries. And I do use the term “cheated” loosely. Whether that was “cheating” or not in Bible College varied among your professors. Some professors did call it cheating because they claimed that you should be able to outline it yourself by just reading it, and you shouldn’t need any help, especially from commentaries. Other professors say that it’s not cheating, but proper research. In fact, you should check commentaries to see if you are right or not. Coincidentally, these professors were the professors who would cut and paste the commentaries’ outlines in their PowerPoint when teaching. Well, I am going to side with the other professors and look at what a couple commentaries say.

The first commentary I want to look at is The Bible Reader’s Companion. The reason I am showing you this is not because it’s a good outline, or at least it’s not the best outline, but because it does kind of verify my first outline. Now because it is very similar to my outline, it’s going to have the same weaknesses as my first outline, the biggest one would being the sections are too big (also note that I am only going to show you the main points, not the subpoints). But at the same time, it has the same strengths. So let’s take a look at it.

The Bible Reader’s Companion Outline
1-12. Public Ministry
13-21. Private Ministry

From the start you can see the problems I had with this outline. There’s not enough sections. Because there is not enough sections, there are too many chapters within a section. Yet it works. The first 12 chapters of John all show the Public Ministry of Jesus. In those chapters, Jesus is seen multiple times teaching to large crowds. All his teachings and miracles are done in a public place where everyone can see, like a synagogue or a temple (see John 18:20,21). The last 9 chapters, chapters 13 to 21, show the Private Ministry of Christ. Remember that John 13-17 is all behind the close doors of the Upper Room where the Last Supper takes place. Most of John 18 and John 19 is Jesus privately talking to his accusers, both the Jewish accusers and the Roman accusers. In the last 2 chapters of John, John 20 and 21, Jesus only appears to the followers, which are only a few hundred. Once again, this is not the best outline because of too few and too big section breakdowns. But it does show it is possible to have a working outline with few sections breakdowns.

The next outline comes from Willmington’s Bible Handbook. This outline is better than the last outline, but it’s still lacking that good quality I am looking for. It’s better because it’s more specific than the last outline. It has more sections. At the same time, it’s still lacking in places, such as even splits between sections. Once again, I’m only going to show you the main points, not the whole outline. Now you’re going to notice a few different things about this outline. This commentary is not as concerned about chapter barriers. Most Bible scholars say this is good. So it will divide by verses. You are also going to notice that this commentary will use a more theological approach to outlining it. I think this is a plus, and I’ll explain it once you see it.

Willmington’s Bible Handbook Outline
1:1-1:18. Jesus the Eternal Son of God.
1:19-18:11. Jesus the Earthly Son of God
18:12-19:42. Jesus the Executed Son of God
20:1-21:25. Jesus the Exalted Son of God.

The first thing I like about this outline (and this is the reason I am showing it) is that the outline keeps in mind the purpose John is writing and the picture of Jesus John is painting. This outline remembers that John is trying to show us Jesus is the Son of God. So in outlining the book, it wants the outline to also show Jesus is the Son of God. So the commentary went into outlining John by asking, “How does John show Jesus as the Son of God?” And the outline shows the answer. The first 18 verses of John shows Jesus as the Son of God eternal with God the Father Himself. The commentary believes John 1:19 to John 18:11 shows Jesus as the Son of Man just as much as the Son of God. To them, this section shows the duality between Christ’s deity and Christ’s humanity. And I can partially see it too. The next thing the commentary notices is that half of chapter 18 and all of chapter 19 is the Son of God being put on trial, which leads to his execution. Then, the last 2 chapters show Jesus exalted through his resurrection. Of course, my biggest beef with this outline is the lack of balance in the sections. The first section is 18 verses, roughly one half of the first chapter of John. The next section is 16 whole chapters and 2 half chapters, totaling 17 chapters. The third section is half of chapter 18 and all of chapter 19, totaling 1 ½ chapters. The last section is 2 chapters, the only section with whole chapters. If you’re following and keeping score, the chapter splits are ½ – 17 – 1 ½ – 2. There’s the lack of even chapter divisions. Also, there’s too much weight on the “earthly son of God.” I don’t think it really tells what all happens within those chapters.

The outline I liked best is from the Bible Exposition Commentary. Just take a look.

Bible Exposition Commentary Outline
I. OPPORTUNITY for Jesus to present Himself (ch. 1-6)
A. Jesus presents Himself to the disciples (ch. 1-2)
B. Jesus presents Himself to Nicodemus (ch. 3)
C. Jesus presents Himself to the Samaritans (ch. 4)
D. Jesus presents Himself to the Jewish leaders (ch. 5)
E. Jesus presents Himself to the Jewish people (ch. 6)
II. OPPOSITION over conflicts between Jesus and the Jewish leaders (ch. 7-12)
A. Conflicts over Moses (ch. 7)
B. Conflicts over Abraham (ch. 8)
C. Conflicts over the Messiah (ch. 9-10)
D. Conflicts over miracles and signs (ch. 11-12)
III. OUTCOME of Jesus and the people (ch. 13-21)
A. The disciples believe and accept Jesus (ch. 13-17)
B. The Jewish leaders do not believe and reject Jesus (ch. 18-19)
C. Jesus is victorious (ch. 20-21)

Let me first explain the reason I put the sub-points in this time. First, the sub-points help better explain why the commentary used these section divisions. Second, this outline needs the sub-points, for the outline would make no sense without them. Immediately I like this outline because it gets rid of all the weaknesses of the past outlines. First of all, it seems like it has the right amount of section divisions. The most we’ve been able to divide the book into is 5 sections, and the least amount of divisions is 2 divisions. We’ve gotten 3 section divisions before, so 3 seems to be the right amount. Second, I like how these sections fairly even divide the chapters. The first section, the “opportunity” section, is 6 chapters long. The second section, the “opposition” chapter, is also 6 chapters long. Sections 1 are 2 are equal. I really like how the public ministry of Jesus is evenly divided. The last section, the “outcome” section is the only big section, with 9 chapters. But considering that most outlines insist on putting chapters 13-21 (even 12-21!) together, it’s best to just leave it like that. But the sub-points help make sense of that.

Speaking of sub-points, the strengths listed above are also true for the sub-points. There is not too many or too few sub-points. Each section has no more than 5 sub-points, and no fewer than 3 sub-points. Each sub-section does not have too many chapters in them. Most sub-points either have 1 or 2 chapters. The one sub-point that has 5 chapters I don’t see as a problem because most commentaries do group all those chapters together. What I’m trying to say is this outline is well balanced outline, and that’s why I like it so much.

Another reason this outline works is because it also carries all the strengths of the other outlines. The “opportunity” section and the “opposition” section are the Ministry of Christ, more specifically the Public Ministry of Christ. The “outcome” section is the Passion of the Christ, or the Private Ministry of the Christ. The “opportunity” section and the “opposition” section focus on Christ’s journeys through Galilee, Samaria and Judea, while the “outcome” section focuses on Jerusalem. The last section also accurately reflects how many followers are with Jesus at the time. Finally, the beauty of this outline is that is does go back to how John is viewing Jesus in his Gospel account. This outline does focus on Jesus as the Son of God. The “opportunity” section is Jesus presenting Himself as the Son of God. In the “opposition” section, all the arguments roughly trace back to the fact that Jesus is the Son of God. The outcomes also go back to Jesus as God the Son. The disciples believe and accept Jesus as the Son of God. The Jewish leaders do not believe and reject Jesus as the Son of God. Jesus is victorious because He is God.

So in conclusion to the outlines, I am going to adapt The Bible Exposition Commentary’s outline as the best outline of John. If we need to pick an original outline, or a shorter outline, it would be the first outline I showed you.

So let’s quickly use the outline to tell the story of John. Ever since Jesus began his ministry at the age of 30, he presented Himself to people as the Son of God, such as the disciples, Nicodemus and the Samaritan Woman at the well. Through His presentation as the Son of God, most people believe and come to faith, while others simply listen to Him and ask Him questions out of curiosity. The climax of Jesus presenting Himself comes in chapter 6, when Jesus starts teaching harder teachings. Many of His followers cannot accept these harder teachings. So his number of followers greatly drops, and now there are 3 views of Jesus. There are the believers, there are the skeptics and there are the adversaries. The believes accept Christ’s teachings and follow Him. The skeptics are unsure about Jesus and question Him. The adversaries oppose Jesus and doubt Him. So Jesus has to go from presenting Himself to defending Himself, as the opposition increases. Jesus defends Himself with Abraham, Moses, the prophets and miracles. The results are the same. Some people believe and come to faith, others do not believe and reject, and yet others are skeptics who are 50/50. But near the end of Christ’s earthly life, that last week, there is no middle ground for the skeptics to stand on. They either have to follow the decision of the disciples by believing and receiving Jesus, or they have to follow the path of the Jewish leaders by not believing and rejecting Jesus. Some come to faith, after seeing the resurrection of Lazarus, but others do not in fear of being excommunicated from the Jewish faith. The resurrection of Jesus Christ is the sign that choosing believing faith in Jesus was the right answer, for it is the one that comes with eternal life.

The perfect transition from outline to theology is talking about other structural details. Why is the perfect transition? A lot of people have attempted to outline John by using common themes found in John’s Gospel. The only problem is these outlines tend to either be topical (as opposed to chronological), messy or confusing. So instead of showing you the outlines that are made, I’m just going to list where the structures appear.

The first and foremost common theme would be the “I AM” statements. I made sure we followed the 7 “I AM” statements carefully. The “I AM” statements are probably the most explicit proof in the Gospel of John that Jesus is God. First and foremost, the term, in the Jewish and Christian mindset, immediately goes back to the name God gave Moses to give to the Israelites in Exodus 3:14- “I AM WHO I AM.” But second, each “I AM” statement would finish with a quality or characteristic that both Jews and Christians would relate to God. Thus, in every “I AM” statement, Jesus twice declares He is God. The 1st century Jews recognized this, and every Christian of every century recognizes this. I hope you were able to follow all the “I AM” statement, but just in case you were unable, here they are-

The 7 “I AM” Statements
1. I AM the Bread of Life (6:35)
2. I AM the Light of the World (8:12)
3. Before Abraham was born, I AM (8:58)
4. I AM the Good Shepherd/Door (10:11,14/10:7,9)
5. I AM the Resurrection and the Life (11:25)
6. I AM the Way, the Truth, and the Life (14:6)
7. I AM the Vine (15:1,5)

Going along with the theme of 7s, there is another 7 in Gospel of John. (Some scholars have suggested John likes the number 7, for when he writes Revelation, there are 7 churches, 7 seals, 7 trumpets and 7 bowls.) The other 7 is the seven miracles, the 7 signs or the 7 miraculous signs. Obviously, I have to start out by defining the term. The Greek term is semeion. Some translations translate it “miracle,” while others translate it as “sign.” The NIV compromises and translates it “miraculous sign.” On the surface level, this may seem redundant, but maybe this redundancy reveals a great theology behind John. Of all the miracles Jesus has done, he picks seven, and he picks his seven very carefully. All 7 miracles serve as signs to the message Jesus is preaching. For example, Jesus uses the Feeding of the 5,000 to preach that He is the Bread of Life. Another good example is John retells Jesus healing a blind man to put in light Christ’s teaching the He is the Light of the World. All 7 Miracles serve as a sign that Jesus is the Son of God. Even the miracles are central to this message.

The 7 Miraculous Signs Jesus Performed in John
1. Water to wine at the wedding in Cana (2:1-11)
2. Healing the Royal Official’s son of a fever (4:43-54)
3. The Invalid Man walks at the Pool of Bethesda (5:1-15)
4. Feeding the 5,000 (6:1-15)
5. Walking on Water (6:16-24)
6. The Blind Man sees at the Pool of Siloam (9:1-7)
7. Lazarus is raised from the dead (11:1-44)

Both the 7 “I AM” Statements the 7 Miraculous Signs demonstrate Jesus is the Son of God, but what else displays Jesus as the Son of God? If John truly is trying to get across the message that Jesus is the Son of God, what else would John include? Indeed, John does insert a lot of evidence that Jesus is the Son of God, so much that if I were to cover it all, it would at least double what I have already written now. So I will quickly cover a few quick topics. Just as we saw early God Sightings in John 1, I will once again bring you to John 1 to look closer at the titles given to Jesus: “the Word” and “the True Light”. In Bible Quizzing, quizmasters made the quizzers say “Word” or “True Light” in the appropriate places and not simply “God” or “Jesus.” I think they made the right decision, both for quizzing and for theology.

The Word. John chooses to call Jesus the Word in order to use familiar terminology with both the Jews and the Greeks. By the 1st century AD, many Jews were now using the Aramaic term for word, memra, in place of God’s holy name, Yahweh, in order to prevent themselves from using God’s name in vein. Because they were doing so, a philosophy developed that the Word of God was equivalent to God Himself, or even that the Word of God is interchangeable with God. On the Gentile side of the coin, Greek philosophers were believed that the Word (Greek term logos) was in eternal, impersonal force that created everything, sustained everything, and ruled over everything. When John uses the term “Word,” John is using the best of both worlds to teach about Jesus. Jesus is the Word like the Greeks say because Jesus created everything, sustains everything, and rules over everything. Unlike the Greeks, Jesus is like the Word like the Jews say because He is the same personal God found in the Old Testament. The only correction John needs to make to the Jews is that Jesus is not interchangeable with God, or equivalent to God, but rather Jesus is His own entity. This is why John says that was with God AND the Word was God in John 1:1,2.

The True Light. Quickly go back and read John 1:5-8. Now read John 1:9-13. Does it look like “the light” John is talking about in both sections are the same light? I say it is not. In John 1:5-8, the light simply refers to moral goodness, and John 1:5-8 shows a spiritual battle between moral goodness and the darkness of sin and evil. The fate of this spiritual battle? The darkness of sin and evil does not understand it. In John 3, Jesus says that the light is rejected because men love the darkness so they can keep on with their evil deeds. By John 1:9-13, the light is now called the True Light because it no longer is talking about the moral goodness, but it is talking about a person, and that person is Jesus Christ. John 1:9-13 pretty much tells the reader that the light in John 1:5-8 was personified and took on a body. Not only is Jesus the Word Incarnate, but Jesus is also the Light Incarnate. Jesus is full of goodness (or sinless), just as much as God the Father is. Remember how John 1:5-8 tells a story of the light entering the world, but being rejected? John 1:9-13 parallels the story to foreshadow the fate of Jesus. Jesus will walk the same path as light. Jesus will enter the world, and then He will be rejected by the world, mainly because the people do not understand Him. Now, unlike the Word, John is more consistent in keeping up with this terminology for Jesus. Jesus refers to light in John 3, John 8 and John 9.

Of course there is more proof that Jesus is the Son of God in John 1, and if you want to look at that again, go back to my writings on John 1. But for those who just want a quick reminder, I will post the 8 God Sightings found in John 1-

God Sightings in John 1
1. Jesus explicitly stated as God, and is seen with God in the beginning (vs. 1-2)
2. Jesus is the creator of the universe, and Jesus gives life (vs. 3-4)
3. John the Baptist’s testimony: Lamb of God and Son of God (vs. 15-35)
4. Andrew and John’s testimony: Rabbi (vs.35-39)
5. Andrew’s testimony: Messiah (vs. 40-42)
6. Philip’s testimony: The One Moses and the Prophets foretold (vs. 43-46)
7. Nathanael’s testimony: Rabbi, Son of God, King of Israel (vs. 46-49)
8. Jesus gives a self-testimony: Son of Man (vs. 50-51)

Now, if we’re sticking with John 20:31 to look for theological themes that John is trying to draw out, remember that John wants to prove that Jesus is the Christ just as much as Jesus is the Son of God. So to accurately look at the theology of the Gospel of John, a examination of the Christ as found in the Gospel of John is necessary.

But first, we must look at the Jewish understanding of the Messiah by the time of Jesus. Obviously, the best way to start this would be to look at the Old Testament. The Old Testament promises a Messiah. This promise is made every time God makes a covenant with someone. In every Old Testament covenant, God promises land, seed and blessing. The ultimate fulfillment of the seed is the promised Messiah. This can be most explicitly seen in the Davidic Covenant, for God promises that the Messiah would be a kingly descendant from the line of David. After God makes this promise with David, that’s all the Old Testament can talk about. The most prevalent fact about the Messiah in the Old Testament is that the Messiah will come from David and would be a king like David. This becomes a problem when Israel and Judah are sent into exile. From the Assyrian captivity of Israel in 722 BC and the Babylonian captivity of Judah in 586 BC, there would always be someone over the Jews, whether it be the Persians, the Greek or the Romans. So how could the Messiah be a sovereign king over a sovereign nation if Israel and Judah were in exile? The Jews concluded that the Messiah had to be a political and militant Messiah. If the Messiah were to be a sovereign king over a sovereign nation, he would have to overthrow the reigning empire. But I will be clear that not every Jew believed the Messiah was to be political and militant. Some Jews watered down this messiah, simply making the Messiah the greatest Rabbi and the greatest Prophet that ever existed. Now this wasn’t the only debate the Jews had about the Messiah. The Messiah was a popular debate topic up to the time of Jesus. Many Jews would come to debate everything about the Messiah, from the origin to Messiah to the destiny of the Messiah.

Therefore, when John writes his Gospel, he adds to the debates and the discussions. John recalls Jesus correcting all these misconceptions about the Messiah. In John 7, the Jews debate whether or not the Messiah’s location origin will be known or not. Jesus answers that his true origin, heaven, is unknown because no one has been to heave. In John 12, when the Jewish leaders ask if the Son of Man will die or live eternally, Jesus replies that the Son of Man must die then be raised to eternal life. These are just a few examples, but I hope you see that not only does Jesus correct the understandings of the Messiah, but also proves how He is fulfilling them. If the teachings and corrections from Jesus aren’t enough, then just look at the testimonies. Andrew, Philip, Nathanael, the Samaritan Woman at the Well and Martha all declare that Jesus is the Messiah. And that’s even before Jesus rose from the dead! All 5 of these people knew Jesus was the Messiah just by being around Jesus.

I will draw you back to the testimonies in John 5. Once again, I will not repeat an explanation for all of them. If you want the explanation, go back to my writings on John 5. I will simply give a list of the 4 Testimonies found in John 5. These testimonies demonstrate that Jesus is both the Christ and the Son of God.

4 Testimonies about Jesus as found in John 5
1. God the Father’s testimony (vs. 31,32,37,38)
2. John the Baptist’s testimony (vs.33-35)
3. Self-testimony through miracles and miraculous signs (vs. 36)
4. Old Testament Scripture’s testimony (vs.39-47)

Now I know my professors and classmates from LBC would be asking, “Where’s the application?” John does give an application right in his theme verse. It’s the most repeated verb in John 20:31. The application is simply to believe. In the Greek, John uses the Greek verb for believe, pisteuō, 98 times. Now, if you’re reading the NIV, you’re not going to be able to count 98t times the word “believe” because half the time the NIV will translate it “put their faith into” just to mix it up. But interesting enough, the Greek noun for faith, pistis, is never used in the Gospel account. Perhaps John does not want us to see belief as something we have, but something we do. If you recall, throughout the book of John, John shows the contrast between belief and unbelief, or the contrast between believers and unbelievers. In the end of John 2, Jesus performs miracles, but the people still do not believe that He is the Christ or the Son of God. They just like watching him do the miracles. In John 6, thousands claim to be followers of Jesus, but when Jesus cranks up the teachings to harder teachings, many stop following Jesus. In John 7-11, John shows that a person cannot simply pick and choose what believe in Jesus. A true believers has to believe that Jesus is both the Christ and the Son of God. Those who don’t believe both, like the skeptics in John 7-11 who believe Jesus is only a rabbi or a prophet, aren’t real followers. John continues to up the ante by insisting that truly believing doesn’t just believe that Jesus existed in history, but is also following the teachings of Jesus. What a perfect application for today. If you were to ask people in my generation and the next youngest generation what being a believing Christian is, they will pretty much tell you it’s adopting the Christian church’s faith statement as their own. This means that they will believe that Jesus is the Son of God, and they will believe that He is sinless, but they won’t love their neighbor, they won’t love their enemies, they won’t do anything Jesus taught them to do. It’s just like Jesus said: people are presented with the light, but they turn it down for the darkness so they can keep with their deeds. If anything becomes more directly applicable to you, I hope it’s the word “believe.” Read this Gospel and ask yourself, “Do I truly believe?” Don’t just believe what you want to believe about Jesus, but believe what Jesus said and what Jesus did, and do likewise.

I better wrap this up before it gets any longer. I will close my conclusion to the Gospel of John the same way I closed my introduction to the Gospel of John. Before I began looking at each chapter individually, I asked you to ask yourself 3 questions reading through John. First, “Who does Jesus claim He is?” Second, “Who does those pro-Jesus, or for Jesus, claim He is?” Third, “Who does those anti-Jesus, or against Jesus, claim Jesus was?” If you sought after these questions, you would have found every time the answer was “Son of God.” Throughout the book, Jesus claimed to be the Son of God, using miraculous signs, using “I AM” statements and even by calling God “the Father.” Those pro-Jesus claimed Jesus was God. The Twelve Disciples (Judas Iscariot is debatable), Nathanael, Nicodemus, the Samaritans (including the Samaritan Woman), Martha and Mary Magdalene all claimed Jesus was the Son of God. Even those anti-Jesus, those against Jesus, knew Jesus claimed to be the Son of God. And John reveals they knew it, too, and that’s why they wanted him dead! Jesus, Son of God or not, was a threat to them and their way of life. They were losing disciples to Jesus, and they became jealous. Thus, they went after him, using the claims to be the Son of God against him. Without a doubt, everyone in this book knew Jesus was the Son of God, and I hope you now know it, too.

Scholars have debated whether or not the Book of John is to be used for evangelistic purpose (to convert non-believers to Christianity) or for discipleship purposes (to help grow and strengthen a Christian’s faith). I believe it can be used for both. Anyone who does not believe in Jesus will believe in Jesus as the Christ and Son of God from the evidence of the signs. Those who already do believe in Jesus will receive strong and persuasive proof that they are correct in their beliefs and they should stay strong in continuing to believe Jesus is the Christ and the Son of God. And for both, as John says, both will receive eternal life. I hope that you have enjoyed this walk through the Gospel of John, I hope you learned something, and most importantly, I hope that you have either gained a new faith or continued to believer more than ever that Jesus is God.

John 21: The Epilogue

I know this is going to sound a lot like the conclusion to the last chapter, but it really is the best way to transition the chapters. By the time the reader gets to the end of chapter 20, at John 20:31, it would seem as if the book of John has come to its end. Everything has finished fully and completely. Jesus finished His ministry, died to pay for the sins of the world, and then rose again 3 days late to defeat sin, evil and death. Many witnesses saw and heard Jesus, coming to faith in Him. There are no loose ends, plot holes or cliff hangers. John has both inductively and deductively brought the reader to the conclusion that Jesus is the Christ and the Son of God. He even states in the last verse of John 20. You almost even want to put a big “THE END” at the end of the chapter to give it that complete fulfillment feeling. But that’s not the end. John has one more story to give the reader. After going through the story, hopefully we’ll be able to see why John included with that chapter.

Before we go into the story itself, let’s go into a little textual criticism. I’m not the only one who thinks that John 20 ends well. A lot of scholars believe it’s a good ending for the chapter. But some scholars say it ends too well. They believe that was the intended ending, and John 21 was attached to the book later. This isn’t the first time we’ve encountered that problem. We encountered with the first 11 verses of John 8. If you read my overview of the whole book of Mark, the same problem was encountered with the last chapter. Sometimes these accusations come up because the text doesn’t seem to fit. But most of the time, the reason the accusations come up is because the earliest manuscripts of the book do not have the section, or the ancient witnesses do not attest to it (that pretty much means the 2nd and 3rd century church fathers do not quote it). This is not true for John 21. All the manuscripts, even the earliest manuscripts, have John 21 in it. There have been writings from the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd century that have quoted this story. So both the manuscripts and ancient witnesses support this story. On top of that, it has the same writing style as all the other 20 chapters of John. There is enough proof to say John wrote this chapter and fully intended it to be the last chapter of his Gospel.

Let’s set the scene. The book opens with the Greek words Meta tauta, which, when literally translated, is “after these things,” but dynamically translated “afterwards.” There is no clear time frame on how much time as past since Jesus appeared the 11 disciples, including Thomas, on that second Sunday. But I believe a good amount of time has passed, and I’ll explain that later. The location is a beach on the Sea of Tiberias, or as we know it better, the Sea of Galilee. Our list of characters are Simon Peter, Thomas, Nathanael, John, James, and 2 other disciples. The book of John does not mention who these two disciples were, but if I had to take a guess, it would be Andrew and Philip. Why? Well, Andrew would could simply say that it would make sense he stayed with his brother Peter. But I think there’s a bigger picture to look at. The technical term is chiasmus, but it has also been called mirror imaging and reflective parallelism. In a chiasmus, a story ends in a reflective or opposite way, kind of like a mirror reflects the opposite of what you actually see. If this is true, I see John 21 as a chiasmus to John 1. John 21 is going to parallel John 1. We already see it in the setting. John 1 takes place in Galilee, and John 21 takes place in Galilee. In John 1, Jesus called 5 disciples: John, James, Andrew, Simon Peter and Philip. All 5 of those disciples are there (if you go along with my assumption the other 2 are Andrew and Philip). If John 1 was the calling of the disciples, this is the “re-calling” of the disciples. Some Bible translations even call the second half of John 21 “The Reinstating of Peter.” I also believe that is why Thomas is there, too. Thomas doubted that the Lord Jesus was alive. He needs continual proof and forgiveness to get him back on track. Also, notice Nathanael is there. Yes, this is the same Nathanael as in John 1, once more, showing the chiasmus. Although it can’t be found in the Bible, I believe that Nathanael must have been one of the greater crowd of followers. After all, he’s still hanging around with the disciples. So the setting has 6 disciples and 1 follower at the Sea of Tiberius at an unknown time.

While we don’t know the time frame exactly, I do believe that a good amount of time has passed. Why? Just look at the disciples’ situation. They went back to their hometown in Galilee, and they went back to their old occupations of being fishermen (I do believe those 6 disciples were all fishermen). Enough time went by since the last resurrection appearance, they must have said to one another, “Well those years following Jesus around on His ministry was a fun learning experience. And I’m glad we got to see he survived that whole crucifixion thing. But he’s probably moving on to bigger and greater things. So we better stop slacking off and get back to our homes, our families and our jobs.” That must have been what they thought because that’s what they did. But still, after reading the first 3 verses of John 21, I almost feel like the men are still daydreaming about that life, because to me, they seem bored to death. They have nothing better to do with their lives but to fish. Oh how they should have remembered what Jesus taught them. Luckily, Jesus is there to remind them.

Out of boredom, Peter decides to pass the time by fishing. The other disciples, and Nathanael, with nothing better to do, decide to join Peter out on the boat fishing. They sit there all morning (and possibly the night before) and they catch nothing. In the morning, Jesus appears out of nowhere. At first, they do not recognize Jesus. Perhaps they thought Jesus was just another fisherman. Maybe it was just an issue of bad lighting or he was too far away. Or, as we kind of understand from other resurrection accounts, it’s possible the disciples still had problems recognizing Jesus in His resurrected form. Jesus calls out to the men on the boat, “Friends, do you have any fish. The NIV chooses to use the word “Friends,” but a more literal translation of the Greek word is more like “children” or “little ones.” It is suggested Jesus is using a term here to show the close love between and teacher and his followers. I can imagine all the disciples giving each other a stupid look, and then pulling a Bill Engvall “Here’s your sign” moment, like, “No, Jesus, we thought we would just hang our nets over into the sea to give them a good washing. Here’s your sign!”

Jesus then instructs the disciples to throw their nets on the other side. Now it doesn’t matter if you are a career fisherman who goes out on a big ship and catches fish with a large net, or if you are a fisherman by hobby who goes out on a small fishing boat and catches fish with a fishing pole. Either way, you know it’s not going to make a big difference what side you are fishing on. Those disciples on the boat were professional fisherman, and they knew with both their “book smarts” and their “street smarts” (or should I say “sea smarts”) that it didn’t matter either way. But they decide to throw their nets on the other side anyway. I don’t know if they did it as an act of faith, or if it was just a “why not?” move. The Bible doesn’t explain. It’s a good thing they did, for when they did, they got fish, a lot of them! 153 to be exact (please don’t try to give it an allegorical meaning; it’s a detail in a historical fact, that’s all). And these weren’t small, measly fish. These 153 fish were so large and heavy that the men could not bring the nets up into the boat. What a miracle!

Indeed, it was a miracle. Once again, I apologize for not being more specific when I said there was only 7 miracles. There were only 7 miracles during Christ’s ministry. If we count Christ’s own resurrection as a miracle (and a lot of people do) and we were to count this large catching of fish as a miracle, this is the 9th miracle. It is another miracle where Jesus shows his authority over nature. It clearly reveals Jesus to be the Son of God, for only God could manipulate nature like that. Indeed, it was enough proof for John. When John realizes this is a miracle, he knows the only man to have miraculous power like that is the Lord. So with a cheerful cry, John explains, “It’s the Lord!” Everyone is excited to see Jesus again, especially Peter. Peter is so excited that he jumps from the boat and swims a hundred yards to see Jesus. The rest of the men follow behind in the boat, going slowly because of all the fish.

When Peter and the rest of the men reach shore, they see Jesus has prepared a fire and some bread. Jesus asks for some fish to cook so they can have breakfast together. John 21:12-14 paints a beautiful picture of fellowship between friends. Over a breakfast meal, the disciples and Nathanael enjoy eating and chatting it up with their Lord and friend Jesus. There was no need to question who the man was or to question Jesus about any teaching. With absolute certainty, they were assured they were eating with Jesus, and this allowed them to eat in peaceful, friendly fellowship with their God. John records this as Christ’s third appearance after dying on the cross (at least recorded in the book of John).

Before we move onto the second half, I want to throw in an application piece here. I drew up the picture painted in John 21:12-14 because I want it to teach a lesson on fellowship with God. I think a lot of Christians think that appearing in the presence of God is one of solemn and reverent worship. When they worship God in His presence, they are to be bowed down, softly speaking in fear, as God talks to them in a monotone and boring voice. Or maybe Christians picture it like a traditional church worship, where we orderly sing hymns, chant liturgy and pray, and then quietly leave. I do believe that there is time and place for that. It shows our reverence and admiration for a holy God, who is willing to extend his love to a sinner. But I also believe that if we do that too much, we lose that picture of Jesus as our brother and our friend. I truly believe there are sometimes that Jesus just wants to sit down with us and be our friend. Sometimes Jesus wants to go on a walk with us and have a good conversation. Say, that’s a perfect segway into the second half of John…

Even though this isn’t written down in John, I think what Jesus said to Peter after breakfast was, “Hey, Peter, let’s go for a walk and talk.” Peter answers, “Um, sure Lord. Where are we going?” Jesus answers, “Oh, just around the sea.” Peter replies, “Yeah, sure, Lord, let’s go.” And the two get up and begin walking. Now John knows what’s going on. Remember, John was 1 of the 3 disciples who Jesus pulled aside for special events, such as special miracles and special teachings. So when John sees Jesus pull Peter aside, he can’t help but wonder what’s going on and what Jesus might be telling Him. So he follows close behind to eavesdrop. I know this won’t make sense as of now, but this will make more sense as of verse 20.

As Jesus and Peter are on their walk, Jesus asks Peter 3 times, “Do you love me?” Each time, Jesus starts with the phrase, “Simon, son of John…” Remember back in Bible times, especially among the Jewish custom, your last name was “Ben-[Father’s name]” or “Bar-[Father’s name],” “Ben” and “Bar” both being suffixes for “Son.” In short, your last name was pretty much. “Son of [Father’s name].” Remember when you were a kid, and you really knew you were in trouble when your parents called you by your full name? I think that’s what Jesus is doing here. Jesus is trying to get Peter’s attention and draw him to the seriousness of the conversation.

In between the 10 verse of John 21:15-25, Jesus asks 3 times if Peter loves him, and Peter 3 replies 3 times that he does love him. In English, this looks like a perfect parallel, but not so in the Greek. The Ancient Greek language had 3-4 words for love. In this passage, Jesus uses two of them. The first and second time, Jesus uses the Greek word agape. The third time, Jesus uses the Greek word phileo. All 3 times Peter uses the word phileo. Some scholars have tried to argue there is theological significance in the choosing of the different words for love, but other scholars have simply dismissed it by saying in this context they are synonyms. I would have to agree with the other scholars. To understand, I will have to state the difference between the two words. The Greek word agape is most of the time meant to mean a love that unconditional, sacrificial, and devoted, as between a God and his worshipper. The Greek word phileo is love that is emotional drive and is just as conditional as it is unconditional, like the love between brothers or other family members. If there was a deep significance in the difference, it would seem as if Peter was dodging the question by offering a weaker answer. It would be like Peter saying, “Well, Lord, I don’t love that much, but I do love you.” If you look at the way Jesus responds, I don’t think Jesus took it that way. If Jesus did take it that way, He would be the one getting more upset every time Peter replied with his answer, not vice versa. On that note, if there was a difference, it would not Jesus who would go from agape to phileo, but rather Peter. Jesus would keep asking Peter “Do you love [agape] me?” until Peter stopped saying “I love [phileo] you” and started saying “I love [agape] you.” Instead, the opposite happens. So I must conclude that there is no difference, but they are all synonyms.

On the same note, do not try to make any specific theological differences between “sheep” and “lambs.” Although they are two different Greek words, they are to be treated like synonyms. Also, do not try to make any specific theological differences between “feed” and “take care” of my sheep. They too are synonyms. In fact, the Greek word that the NIV translates into “take care” is a verb form of the noun “pasture.” Why does a shepherd take his sheep out to pasture? The number one reason is to give it fresh grass to eat, which is feeding it.

But all my ranting about making the differences in language a difference in theology should not make you think there is some good exegesis we can pull out of this passage. First of all, what does Jesus mean by “these” when he says to Peter “Do you love me more than these?” I think “These” incorporates his occupation of fishing, his friendship with the other disciples, his family, his hometown, and everything that use to be dear to Peter. Once Jesus went out of Peter’s presence, Peter went back to his old life. Jesus wanted to know if Peter loved his old life better or if he loved the life Jesus gave him better. For if Peter loved his old life better, he wasn’t really fit to become the church leader Jesus wanted him to be. It’s a good thing Peter said he loved Jesus more! Indeed, Jesus did need Peter to love him more than family, friends, neighbors, co-workers, his home and his job for the mission He was to call Peter into (see Luke 14:25-27).

While I am not one for trying to distinguish theological differences between synonyms, and I am usually oppose unnecessary numerology (trying to find allegorical significance of numbers) in the Bible, I do believe there is a significance in why Jesus asked Peter 3 times if Peter loved Him. It does have to do with how many times Peter denied Jesus. If you remember correctly, I proposed in John 13 that a possible reason Peter denied Jesus 3 times was because Peter said 3 times that he would stick up for Jesus. Now in a bigger picture, the 3s are bunched up to make a bigger 3. Peter first says he will stick up for Jesus 3 times, then Peter denies him 3 times, so Peter has to confess his love 3 times. It’s like Jesus is saying, “Just making sure you love me, Peter. Because last time I checked, you pretended like you didn’t even know me.”

Like I said, Jesus really needed to know Peter loved him, and the prophecy about Peter in John 21:18 explains it. If I may take I guess at what the Bible doesn’t have written down, I think Jesus said something to Peter along of the lines of, “Peter, I just really needed to know that you love me. Because, Peter, you will face the same persecution I faced. You too will be falsely accused and falsely condemned. You too will be thrown into prison. You too will be persecuted and tortured, and you too will be martyred for your beliefs. And when you go through all this, I can’t have you doubting me, I can’t have you denying me, I can’t have you disowning me, and I can’t have you recanting. For I want you to be the leader of the church. If you’re the leader, they are going to look up to you, as they look up to me now. And when they look up to you, they need to see Me. I need you evangelize to the non-believers and disciples the believers at any cost, and the only way to do that is to love Me and My will for you more than anything in the world. Can you do that for Me?”

That’s just my paraphrasing. If we were to look at the text, Jesus prophecies Peter’s fate by using an analogy between a young man and an old man. A young man is independent enough to dress himself and go wherever he wants, but an old man is dependant on everyone for everything, from getting dressed to moving about. Jesus predicts that Peter in the near future will still have his independence to go and preach wherever the Holy Spirit leads him. But in the distant future, Peter will be arrested, and an arrested man is dragged to where his captors want him to go. Ultimiately, this prophecy talks about his death of crucifixion, where the crucified person’s hands were stretched across the beam. Early church tradition states that Peter was arrested in 64 A.D. and later crucified within the same year. In one way, we can see Peter’s death glorifying Jesus by dying by the exact same method. In another way, Peter’s death glorifying Jesus because, like Jesus, He was willing to die for the exact same gospel message his Lord died for.

Jesus closes this section in John 21:19 by giving the command, “Follow me!” Once again, we see another parallel back to John 1, as this book began with Jesus calling disciples, including Peter, to follow him (John 1:43, cf. Matthew 4:18-20 & Mark 1:16-18). The NIV calls this section “Jesus Reinstates Peter.” In one sense, we can see Christ’s command to Peter to follow him as making him a disciple again. If Peter legitimately recanted being a disciple by disowning Jesus, he needed to be made a disciple again. In another sense, maybe Christ’s command for Peter to follow him was a greater calling than when Jesus first called Peter to follow Him. The first time, Jesus called Peter to be His disciple, His student. Now Jesus was calling Peter to a greater mission. Peter was now called to be His apostle, His messenger of the good news and a leader to His believers. Either way, Peter is being called to stick with Jesus, even when Jesus is not present with Him.

By this time on their walk, Jesus and Peter know John is following close behind. While Jesus is giving prophecies about the future, Peter might as well ask about John. I don’t see this as Peter being nosy into the life of other people. Think all the way back to my introduction on John. In my introduction, I talked a little about the character of John, who he was. Remember that I said it’s possible that John’s father Zebedee and Simon Peter’s father John were partners in fishing, so it’s possible that Peter and John were co-workers all their adult life, and maybe even childhood friends. During the ministry of Jesus, Peter and John were 2 of the inner 3 disciples, so they had unique bonding time with Jesus. Even after this book, John is always seen with Peter in Acts. When you put all this evidence together, I really think Peter and John were best friends. Being best friends, naturally Peter wants to know what happens to his best friend.

Before we get into what Jesus didn’t mean, let’s talk about what Jesus did mean. I think it would be helpful to put another paraphrase of mine. Pretty much, Jesus said, “Don’t worry about it. Don’t focus on what’s going to happen to him or my relationship with him. You need to focus on your relationship with me and what I called you do. Focus on that.” There’s some good application there. Too often Christians will meddle into other people’s spiritual life before they take care of their own. They will call out other people’s sins before confessing or repenting of their own sins. They will try to spiritually discipline someone while their spiritual walk is far from disciplined. They compare and contrast their spiritual life with others, only to come out feeling that they are better than everyone else. The worse part is when they think they are in the right to do so, even calling it accountability! The problem is they end up doing what Jesus warned us no to do: we try to take the speck out of someone else’s eye before taking the plank out of our own eye! Now Jesus doesn’t say to leave the speck in their eye and leave the plank in our own eye, but simply that we should make sure we remove our own plank first before removing the speck. Before we meddle into other spiritual lives, we need to straighten out our own lives.

Now onto what Jesus didn’t mean. Apparently the witnesses who heard this took the words “If I want him to remain alive until I return, what is that to you?” to mean that John was going to live until Jesus came again (and I can see that mistake even being made in the modern era, if it wasn’t for the following verses). The thought Jesus was saying, “He will remain alive until I return.” John clearly understands Jesus to mean, “Even if I suggest something as crazy as him living on earth until I return, that shouldn’t affect you.” Context also helps the misunderstanding. First of all, a lot of 1st century Christians, including the Twelve Apostles (especially them) really thought that Christ’s second return would happen within their lifetime. So at first, this idea wasn’t too far-fetched. This idea meant Jesus was coming back in half a century, and all 12 of the Apostles would escape martyrdom until Christ’s return. The idea was quickly shot down by the time John wrote his Gospel. If John truly wrote the book of John either in the late 80s or early 90s AD, most of the Twelve Apostles have died martyred deaths. It’s even possible John is the only original Apostle still alive. Yet some of the 1st century Christians are holding on to this idea that Jesus was returning soon. Why? They remembered the words Jesus spoke to Peter in John 21:22. John was still alive. He was even dodging persecution pretty when. When tried for his faith, he was not martyred, but exiled to the island of Patmos. Even then, John finished his sentence and left the island. He was still alive. So some Christians still thought Jesus was coming very soon because Jesus promised that John would not die. John quickly kills the rumor and gets everything straightened out. Indeed, tradition states John simply died of old age.

The real, true last 2 verses of the book do not parallel any passage in John 1, but I do kind of see them parallel the last 2 verses of the previous chapter, John 20. Let’s put them both up.

John 20:30–31-
30 Jesus did many other miraculous signs in the presence of his disciples, which are not recorded in this book. 31 But these are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name.

John 21:24–25-
24 This is the disciple who testifies to these things and who wrote them down. We know that his testimony is true. 25 Jesus did many other things as well. If every one of them were written down, I suppose that even the whole world would not have room for the books that would be written.

The overall message both pairs of verses have is that the book of John is just a sampling of what Jesus. But even adding the Synoptic Gospels, that too only seems like a sampling of what Jesus did. It may seem like John is using a hyperbole in John 21:25, but maybe it’s really an understatement. Jesus did do a lot in his 35 years of life on earth as a human being. Heck, Jesus did a lot in just the 3-4 years of his ministry. If ever single second, or every single minute of the life of Jesus was recorded, it would take a lot of books and scrolls to get it all down. But it brings up a good point. Why didn’t the Gospel writers put more down than just the 89 chapters written between the 4 Gospel writers? It goes back to the purpose statement in John 20:31. The Gospel writers only wrote down the information that proved their message. And that’s why the last 2 verses of John 21 (which are the last 2 verses of the book) also carry the overall purpose in them. Jesus did many other things as well, and John witnessed a lot of them, but John only wrote down 21 chapters worth because that’s all needed to prove Jesus was the Christ and the Son of God.

One more thing to note about these 2 conclusions. Both conclusions mention one or more disciples present to bear witness. John 21 says it explicitly in verse 24, and John 20 says it implicitly in verse 30. Simply put, John is saying that the reader can be sure all of the recorded events are true because there was at least one disciple who saw them all, and that disciple was John. I do find comfort that this Gospel is not merely an editor putting together an anthology of stories, or an interviewer writing down a news report from witnesses. Rather, this information is first hand from John himself. (Maybe that’s why John didn’t put down a birth story. He wasn’t there to witness it.)

This is really and truly the end of the Gospel of John. Yet I just don’t feel right ending my commentary here. Even though this chapter can be seen as an epilogue to the book of John, for my devotional commentary, I’m going to write my own epilogue. My epilogue will be like an overall summary of the book. I plan to try to find some way to outline the book, as well as connect all the chapters to show you how John in consistent in carrying out the theme of Jesus as Christ and God the Son.

John 20: Easter Sunday

I want you to think about the events that happen at a typical modern-day American home on Easter. Since this is one of those holidays where the mythological holiday creature comes during the night (or really early in the morning), children wake up their parents at the crack of dawn so they can see what the Easter bunny brought them. So much for sleeping in on a holiday. At best, parents can delay this up to 8 AM. At 8 AM, parents watch their children go on an Easter egg hunt and go through their Easter baskets. In the 9 o’clock hour, it’s Sunday School, and in the 10 o’clock hour, it’s church. Even if this family doesn’t usually go to church, if they have to go at least twice a year, this holiday is one of them (Christmas being the other). After church, the family goes home to a traditional Easter dinner for lunch. Usually the main platter is ham (after all, thanks to Jesus setting up the New Covenant, we can now eat pork!). Then the day is pretty much done. Easter is over. And it’s only an hour or two into the afternoon. This may be the reality for many modern-day American families, but it wasn’t the reality for the Disciples in the 1st century A.D. For them, the resurrection wasn’t just an event that happened in the morning and bit in the afternoon. It was an event that happened over 40 days! Not even the initial first day was just a morning event. The disciples struggled with probability, questions, and even doubt that lasted all day John chapter 20 reveals how Easter Sunday was all-day event, and a day was very eventful from sunrise to sunset.

Before I go any further, once again I will remind you that the resurrection appears in all 4 Gospel accounts. All 4 Gospel accounts tell the story differently, and to the untrained eye, it may seem like they contradict. So I will mention the other Gospel passages if there seems to be contradiction or if it needs some further explaining. If it does not correlate with the message John is speaking in John 20, I will breeze over it or skip it altogether.

For example, I’ve heard an atheist complain about the contradiction of the number of women and which women went to the tomb on that Sunday morning. Matthew has 2 women: Mary Magdalene and “the other Mary” (most likely the mother of James). Mark has 3 women: Mary Magdalene, Mary the mother of James, and Salome. Luke has Mary Magdalene, Mary mother of James, Joanna, and then he tags “others” on at the end, which could be an indefinite amount. John just mentions 1 woman: Mary Magdalene. Surely all 4 Gospels writers can’t be right, can they? Surely this is a contradiction…right? Well, consider this conversation between a mother and her high school son…

Mom: “Son, why were you home so late from school? Did you get another detention?”
Son: “No, mom. I went to the high school basketball game. It was a playoff game against our rival school to decide who got to play in the championship, I thought it would be an interesting game to stay and watch.”
Mom: “Oh. So who else was there watching the game?”

Now let’s stop the conversation and contemplate what the son’s answer might be. Obviously the mom asked this simply for an alibi. So how is the son going to answer this answer? Is he literally going to name everyone who was there? This would be almost an impossible feat, unless he was the guy working at ticket booth or taking attendance. It’s a playoff game, it’s possible over a hundred people are there. He’s not going to mention every single person. So who will he mention? At the most, he’ll mention everyone that he knows. He’s not going to talk about people who he can’t identify. Furthermore, he’s only going to mention the people he knows and who he noticed. There might have been people at the game that he did know, but he didn’t know they were there. He might only mention the people he knows and the people his mom knows. After all, he mentions people he knows but his mom doesn’t know, she’s going to ask, “Who’s that?” every time, and the son wants to avoid explaining who every person is. Also, if the son knows his mom just wants an alibi, he might only mention the people sitting next to him or the people who he was hanging out with at the game. This small group might be less than 10% of the people that was there, but it’s enough to prove that he was really at the game. Same goes with the Gospel writers. The Gospel writers aren’t going to name every single person who saw the empty tomb that morning. They are only going to mention the ones that pertain to the story. If there is any overall unity the Gospel writers are trying to get across, is that there was early witnesses to the resurrection, and all 4 Gospel writers show that, no matter how many or which ones.

On that same note, the fact that there are female witnesses to be the first to witness the resurrection is an excellent apologetic to both the resurrection itself and the inerrancy of the Scriptures. In the 1st century A.D., a woman’s testimony was not considered legitimate in a legal court. In short, you could not call a woman to the stand because her testimony was not accepted. In fact, if there was a 1st century trial on the resurrection, the woman’s testimony would have been thrown out. Thus, if the disciples were making up the resurrection, they would have either said that the disciples, or maybe even the Pharisee followers (like Nicodemus or Joseph of Arimathea), found the empty tomb first. But the true truth was that it was the women found it first, and to stick to the truth of the Scriptures, that’s all 4 Gospel writers recorded it.

If you remember, Jewish law and Jewish custom does not allow a Jew to go near a dead body during the Sabbath or during holiday, since it would make them unclean. That’s why the Jews demanded that the crucified men be removed from the crosses so quickly. Now if it wasn’t for this Jewish law, I bet the women would have gone the next day to the tomb, but because of the Sabbath, they had to wait. The women were forced to be patient, but still, they made plans to go to the tomb first thing in the morning. Mary Magdalene was the most impatient of them all. She doesn’t want to even wait until sunrise; she’s willing to go in the morning while it’s still dark. Perhaps she thought the women were taking too long to get themselves ready to go to the tomb, so she went ahead of them. The other woman might have just shook their head, thinking to themselves, “Silly Mary, how’s she going to roll away the stone in front of the tomb all by herself?”

As Mary approaches the tomb, she seems something out of place. The stone has been rolled away! Now it’s debatable how close Mary got. From John’s account, one could easily say that Mary didn’t peek her head in the tomb, or even got close. All she saw was the stone rolled away. The accounts from the Synoptic Gospels give more of an idea that she actually looked in. Now, in my mind, the most logical thing to do if I was Mary would be to run back to my female friends and tell them the news. I have no idea why Mary got the idea to run to Peter and John and tell them. Perhaps she figured that Peter and John, being the closest 2 disciples, might have a better knowledge of what’s happened to Jesus. After all, Mary was with the women all day and all night, so she knows they don’t know. Maybe Mary just thought it made the most sense to report it the 2 closest disciples. Whatever the case, Mary Magdalene runs to where Peter and John are to report that the body isn’t there.

During the time Mary Magdalene has embarked to the tomb, found the tomb empty, and ran to where Peter and John are residing, the rest of the women (at least 3 of them), begin their journey to the tomb. The Synoptic Gospels fill us in on what happens there. As I said, I’m not going to go into that too deeply. If you want to go into it deeply, read the Synoptic Gospels. But in short, the women see the empty tomb, they see angels dressed in white telling them Jesus rose from the dead, and then they are given instructions to the disciples. So these women also run off to find Peter and John.

For this next scene, let’s picture the scene from the viewpoint of Peter and John. It’s early morning, around sunrise. Peter and John are fast asleep. All of a sudden, they hear a vicious knock on the door. They are scared, not only because they’ve been startled from your sleep, but they fear that it’s the Jewish leaders and Roman leaders, preparing to arrest the Disciples on the same charges as Jesus. As they walk closer to the door, they feel a bit better recognizing the voice as Mary’s, but they still feel a bit uneasy due to the frantic sound her voice, sounding concerned. They open the door to Mary, babbling away at a mile a minute. Somehow, they are able to pull out, “They have taken the body away!” As Peter and John try to beckon Mary, “Who, Mary? Who took the body?” all of a sudden, Mary the mother of James, Salome and Joanna come running up to Peter and John. They start babbling on and on about seeing an empty tomb, seeing angels, and claiming Jesus rose from the dead. Now Peter and John are really confused. Last time they checked, all the women went together to the tomb. Then how can the woman have different stories? Peter and John conclude the best way is to just go down themselves and look at the scene.

Both Peter and John, concerned about the whereabouts of the body, run down to the tomb. I like how John mentions that he outran Peter (although he mentions it humbly because he still does not refer to himself by name). Mary Magdalene, now herself confused (because she knows what she saw, but the other women say something different), runs behind the two disciples to see if anything has changed. Now as they are running, let’s pause for another good apologetic. Some opponents of the Bible have suggested that the women went to the wrong tomb, and when they saw that this tomb was empty, they concluded Jesus rose from the dead. I think John 20 proves that to be not true. I do think a bit that maybe Peter and John thought that themselves. They might have thought, “Maybe Mary Magdalene went to the wrong tomb. Let’s make sure she went to the right tomb.” So Peter and John went to make sure Mary Magdalene went to the right tomb, and sure enough, she did. While I’m at it, let me continue to debunk the “wrong tomb theory.” If Mary Magdalene did go to the wrong, she would not have concluded that Jesus rose from the dead. From verse 9 (as well as other verses in John the Synoptic Gospels), we know the disciples and other followers of Jesus still had yet to grasp the whole idea of resurrection. If Mary did go to the wrong tomb, she would have concluded that the body was stolen, as seen in verses 2 and 13. And if it was truly the wrong tomb, it would have been only a matter of minutes for someone to find the right tomb. The tomb was clearly marked, with a garden, with one spot for a body (the sign of a rich tomb), a sealed stone, and Roman guards. It’s kind of a hard to mix up a clearly marked tomb with a generic tomb.

So John gets to the tomb first, Peter comes in second, and Mary arrives third. All 3 of them see a tomb with no body and neatly folded linen cloths. They don’t even see the angels the other women talked about (I don’t know, maybe they went on coffee break). John 20:8 says that John went in, saw, and “believed.” What did John believe? Remember John was confronted with 2 different stories: Christ’s body was stolen and Christ had risen from the dead. Which story did John believe? What makes this question interesting is John 20:9, which says that the disciples did not understand that the Scriptures said the Christ must rise from the dead. Some people have suggested that John saw the scene, realized it couldn’t have been a robbery, and thus believed Jesus rose from the dead. If this is the case, then John 20:9 has to be interpreted that John simply did not comprehend the full picture of resurrection. But the Greek word used for “believed” here has to do with a full perception of the subject. Besides, looking John 20:19-25 and Luke 24:36-43 (the parallel passage), there seems to be this idea that all disciples present totally forgot Christ’s teachings of resurrection, including John. So when I see “believed” in John 20:8, I take it to mean, “He believe Mary Magdalene’s story,” which is the body was stolen. But Peter and John have no leads on who took the body, so they just go back home sad and defeated.

Before I go on, I want to pause to look at a certain verse. Look at John 20:7b with me

John 20:7b-
The cloth was folded up by itself, separate from the linen.

When I first saw this verse, it stood out to me as something that didn’t belong. Why would John go out of his way to mention such a detail? I know John is trying to be detailed, but this is ridiculous. I was always trained that if the Bible points out a descriptive detail, there’s always some symbolic or theological meaning behind it. So what’s the meaning behind this descriptive detail? Some scholars have drawn this back to the idea of the master and the servants at a dinner table. When it came time for dinner, the servants would cook the food and set the table. When master would enter the dining room, the master would eat by himself (or with his family), and the servants would just stand back against the wall, just in case the master would need anything. If the master was done his meal, he would get up, crumple up the linen napkin, and throw it on the table. This was a sign to the servants to clean up the table because the master was done. But if the master wasn’t done, but needed to get up (to go to the bathroom, for example), he would fold his napkin and place it neatly back on its plate. This was a sign to the servants that said, “Don’t touch anything. I’m coming back to finish.” Thus, some people have interpreted this line from John 20:7 as Jesus saying, “I’m coming back to finish what I started.” Let’s continue on with the story in John.

While Peter and John have gone back defeated, Mary Magdalene can’t stand it anymore. She just breaks down in front of the tomb, bawling. In between the tears, Mary looks over to see 2 angels, just like the other women said. When she makes eye contact with the angels, the angels ask her, “Why are you crying?” I like how Mary answers without really reacting to the angels. Most people who encounter angels usually have a fear reaction, but not Mary. She just answers them. “They have taken my Lord away, and I don’t know where they have put him.” Mary turns her head once more, and she sees another man. Through her tears, she can’t tell it’s Jesus. She just suspects it’s the gardener. So Mary may have supposed that the gardener might have temporarily moved the body to clean the garden and tomb. So Mary kindly asks the gardener where he placed the body so she can see it. Jesus simply replies, “Mary.” Now the Greek language did not have exclamation marks, but if they did, I think they would have put one here. Jesus is saying to her “Mary! It’s me!” The Bible Knowledge Commentary connects this back to Christ’s preaching of the Good Shepherd, when Jesus says, “I call the sheep by name, and the sheep know my voice.” Once Mary heard Jesus call her by name, she recognized it was Jesus calling her. Mary replies, “Rabboni!” Now there is some debate on whether or not “Rabboni” differs from “Rabbi.” Perhaps “Rabboni” is a higher ranked teacher than a “Rabbi,” or maybe “Rabboni” shows a more intimate relationship with the teacher than “Rabbi.” Whether the case may be, Mary Magdalene recognized this as the Jesus she knew for so long, and she embraced him. That is why Jesus says in John 20:17 not to hold on to him. It’s not that Mary touching Jesus makes him unclean, but rather, Jesus doesn’t want Mary to get too attached to the thought that Jesus will be hanging around for a while. Jesus still intends to go back to the Father. Christ’s last words to Mary are to tell his brothers, the disciples, that Jesus is going back to the Father God. Mary reports more than that to the disciples. She retells the whole story on how she saw the Lord Jesus.

Now here’s what I believe happened after Mary Magdalene reported to the disciples what Jesus had told her to report. Even though none of the Gospels record this story, both Luke 24:34 and 1 Corinthians 15:5a record that there is a private appearance between Jesus and Simon Peter. Thomas and Gundry’s The NIV Harmony of the Gospels states it has to happen after the appearance to Mary Magdalene (Mark 16:9-11 refers to Mary Magdalene as the first person to see the resurrected Jesus), but before the two men on the road to Emmaus. I say that after Mary Magdalene reported back to Peter what happened, Peter headed off to the tomb for a second time. What would drive Peter to go back to the tomb a second time? One would think Peter would see Mary as the girl “who cried wolf.” I think Peter saw something different in Mary that would make Mary change her story. Something must have happened. Now Peter has at least 4 women telling him Jesus had raised from the dead, so he had to listen. Also, I think Peter hoping so much that the “stolen body” theory wasn’t true, and that Jesus really did raise from the dead. I even think that he himself pondered about the evidence. The scene Peter saw didn’t look like a thief came in. So Peter went back a second time, and I believe that second time Peter went back, he found everything just as Mary Magdalene saw: two angels in the tomb and Jesus in the garden. Thus, Simon Peter became the first man to see the resurrected Jesus.

In the paragraph above, I said one of my reasons to believe Peter went back a second time was that the evidence at the scene did not appear to look like a robbery. Why doesn’t John 20:6,7 look the scene of a robbery case? Now’s the perfect time to give a defense on the claim that the body of Jesus was stolen by thieves. The tomb Jesus laid in would be a target for thieves because it was the tomb of a rich man. But grave robbers rarely to never stole the body because the body would have little to no value. Instead, the grave robbers would take whatever the body was buried with that had value. The only thing worth value in the tomb (and this especially the case for the poor) would be the expensive fine linen the burial clothes were made out of. If the grave of Jesus was really the robbed, the thieves would have taken his clothes and left a naked, dead body in the tomb. The only way the thieves would have stolen the body is if they knew they could get a price out of it. The only ones who would be interested in the body would be the Jewish leaders. But that’s exactly why the Jewish leaders asked Pilate to put guards at the tomb. They wanted to make sure no one left with the body. So the Jewish leaders wouldn’t pay robbers to steal the body because they knew it was well guarded at the tomb. Speaking of which, it could not have been thieves because that tomb was well guarded by soldiers. Those soldiers were so strong; a few mere men could not have fought them off. Between the guards and the seal on the stone, thieves could have not gotten to the body. I have one more piece of evidence to give to you to prove it can’t be thieves. Even if thieves did steal the body and leave behind the expensive clothes, they would not have taken the time to fold the clothes up nicely and neatly. Therefore, I conclude all this proof shows the body was not stolen by grave robbers. Even Simon Peter concluded that, and that’s why he was the first man to see the risen Jesus.

All the events I have spoken about so far have all happened before noon on that first Easter morning. Within that time, Jesus has appeared to at least 4 women, as well as Simon Peter. When we celebrate Easter, our celebrations end a little after 12, but the events on the first Easter did not end a little after 12. John’s story of the resurrection will pick up again in the evening of the day. Until then, Luke says that Jesus appears to 2 of His followers (these 2 men are not among the 12 Disciples Jesus chose) on the road to Emmaus in the afternoon. I’m not going into Luke’s story, but it does kind of help set the scene, as these 2 men cancel their trip to Emmaus to head back to Jerusalem and report to the disciples what they have seen.

Picking up in John 20:19, evening has fallen on that Sunday. The scene is a room in Jerusalem, with all the doors locked tight. The disciples are still afraid that the Jewish leaders are going to come after Christ’s Disciples next, so they are being very cautious. The characters are the 10 disciples. Obviously, we know Judas Iscariot isn’t there because he betrayed Jesus and then hanged himself. We don’t know where Thomas is, but we know Thomas is not there. For all we know, they sent Thomas out to get dinner. Out of nowhere, Jesus appears to the 10 Disciples are says, “Peace be with you!” Even though in Greek, this goes back to a Hebrew greeting, almost similar to “hello.” But this might have been a more real greeting, one with a deeper meaning. Before Jesus left, during the Last Supper, Jesus constantly reminded His disciples that he was going to give them peace. His presence there was another ounce of peace for them. I’m not sure if it really did give the disciples peace at first. According to Luke, their first reaction was that it was a ghost, or that they were having a vision or hallucination. But Jesus quickly debunks this theory as he shows the disciples the holes in his hands and the stab wound in his side.

This debunking is one needed for both the past and the present. Let’s start in the past since that is the original context. Within 100 years of Jesus rising again, false theories about the resurrection were already floating around. The most popular one was that Jesus just raised from the dead in spirit, not body. This was started by the Gnostics, who claimed the body was bad. So in the Gnostic mindset, a bodily resurrection would not make sense. What made sense to them was a spirit resurrection only. Jesus debunks that by showing the wounds in His body. Those wounds were the same that a human body would have, making the conclusion it was a human body. So that debunks the Gnostics’ conclusion, the Jehovah’s Witnesses’ conclusion, and the disciples’ first incorrect conclusion. Well, what about the disciples’ second incorrect conclusion, that this is a hallucination or a dream. This is a common belief of skeptics today, who will insist that wishful thinking led the disciples to hallucinate or dream that Jesus had come back to life. Last time I checked, hallucinations, dreams, and visions were hard to feel. The disciples actually could touch and feel Jesus. Still, if that is not enough proof, I would keep saying to go back to the witnesses. By now, at least 4 female witnesses and 12 male witnesses (10 disciples plus 2 followers) saw Jesus. By the time this is all done, over 500 people will see Jesus in this time period of 40 days. It’s hard for over 500 people to hallucinate the same thing. In my book, there is enough to evidence to prove that seeing Jesus alive was not a dream, a vision, or a hallucination, but what really happened.

After Jesus wishes peace on the 10 Disciples a second time, John records Jesus breathing on the disciples and telling them to receive the Holy Spirit. Here is another beautiful word play. The Greek word pnema can be translated “spirit,” “wind,” or “breath.” This is also true in the Hebrew. In Genesis, Moses uses the Hebrew word ruah to draw the connection of breathing on the newly-made man and giving him life. Jesus “breathing” on the disciples was a symbol of them receiving the Holy Spirit. Once the received the Holy Spirit, they would became new creation and have a new life. Once again, parallels to the creation story in Genesis 2. Many people try to understand what Jesus is saying in John 20:22. Some have even theorized that the disciples received a piece of the Holy Spirit then and there to understand the resurrection (see Luke 24:45). I think it simply is another command from Jesus to receive the Holy Spirit when he comes on Pentecost.

As I mentioned before, at this setting, Thomas is not present, for one reason or another. When Thomas does get back, Jesus is already gone. They all report gladly to him that Jesus has come back from the dead and they all saw it. And this is where Thomas gets the nickname “Doubting Thomas.” Thomas refuses to believe until Jesus has appeared to him and also shown him the holes in his hands, feet and side. Do not blame Thomas for doubting. As we discussed above, all the other 10 disciples doubted Jesus had risen from the dead, even when they saw him. It wasn’t until the felt the flesh of Jesus that they believed. Thomas was simply asking to do the same. Also, do not see this as John picking on Thomas. This is just John’s way of showing character development. After all, John as shown us positive qualities of Thomas, such as willingness to follow Jesus to the death (John 11:16) and seeking to follow Jesus closer (John 14:5).

John picks up with the story again in John 20:26, telling the reader that a whole week has past. It’s already the next Sunday. From what we’ve read in the Bible, both Synoptic Gospels and John’s Gospel, Jesus has not made any more appearances. I wonder how Thomas felt all this past week. Was he upset that his fellow disciples kept insisting that Jesus rose from the dead, without any evidence? Was he annoyed, seeing this a cruel practical joke? The scene this following Sunday is a lot like the scene the past Sunday. It’s behind locked door in a large room in Jerusalem. The only difference is this time Thomas was with them. Jesus comes again, even greeting them with the same greeting: “Peace be with you!” Jesus goes right to Thomas and gives him the same treatment as the rest of the disciples a week earlier. He asks Thomas to put his fingers and hands into the holes in his hands and his sides to see they are real. I love Thomas’s reaction: “My Lord and My God.” It connects exactly with John 20:31, the theme verse for this Gospel.

John 20:31-
But these are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name.

In the previous verse, John 20:30, John says that Jesus did many other miraculous signs in the presence of his disciples. When I told you that Jesus only performed 7 miracles in the whole book, I meant John only records 7 miracles in the book during the ministry of Jesus. Indeed, Jesus rising from the dead is a miracle. And if the raising of Lazarus was the greatest miracle during the ministry of Jesus, then Jesus rising up would be the greatest miracle of His whole earthly life. It is the miracle that defines our faith, for without His resurrection, our faith is false, empty and futile (1 Corinthians 15:14,17). If all of Christ’s miracles were signs that He was God, then this miracle was the greatest sign that proved once and for all Jesus was God. Notice Thomas’s reaction. He didn’t say “My Teacher!” or “My Rabbi!” He said, “My Lord and My God!” All the disciples and followers of Jesus after the resurrection had the same reaction. Those who had yet to call Jesus “Christ,” “Lord,” or “God” all of a sudden did start giving him these titles. The disciples and followers who were already calling Jesus by those titles were not starting to call him by those titles more. If they were unsure before Jesus died, they were sure after Jesus came back to life. If they were sure when before Jesus died, now they were very sure after Jesus rose from the dead. Jesus rising up again was the icing on the cake that sealed the deal. It is the final, grand conclusion that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God and God the Son.

Since you know that I like ending each chapter with both an application within the chapter as much as an application to the grander theme of the chapter, I’m going to turn to John 21:29 for our application verse of the chapter.

John 20:29-
Then Jesus told him, “Because you have seen me, you have believed; blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed.”

I think sometimes Christian get into their head that the Disciples were the most blessed people on the earth because they got to see Jesus through the few years of ministry, the saw the Passion Week for Jesus, and they saw the resurrected Jesus. Therefore, we seem them as higher Christians than we are. This is simply not true. The disciples came to belief because they saw the ministry of Jesus, the Passion Week of the Christ, and the resurrected Son of Man. Christians who believe today believe even thought they did not see the life, death or resurrection of Jesus. Jesus says that takes much more faith for a non observer to believe (some translations have “more blessed are those have not seen…”). I believe this to be true, especially today, when we live in a world that claims, Jesus never rose, Jesus never died on the cross, and some even go as far as say Jesus never lived or existed period. In summer of 2009, I went down to Israel, and I spent a whole week in Jerusalem. While in Jerusalem, I went to the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, the traditional and most likely site of the crucifixion and burial of Jesus. Within the church was smaller cathedral which held the tomb where Jesus was laid. A line wrapped around it a couple times. Waiting in line would take a couple to a few hours. I was advised not to waste my free day in Jerusalem to do so, but some of my friends did. I’m glad I took the advice. Just like John 20:29 says, I can still say I believe, even though I didn’t see the empty tomb.

Once you get to the bottom of John 20, at verse 31, you’d think you hit the grand and final conclusion. The book could end there, and it would be a good ending. No open end, no cliffhanger, nothing of the sort. John comes to full conclusion and ending in John 20. But that’s not the end. You don’t have to look too far to see there is one last chapter to John, the 21st chapter of John. I see John 21 as an epilogue to John. It can be understood as part of the resurrection account, but it also can be seen as smooth transition into the church age, as seen in Acts, the Pauline Epistles and the General Epistles, especially John’s 3 epistles. So stay tuned for one more chapter of John. Perhaps we can see the Son of God one more time in it.

John 19: The Roman People v. Jesus Christ

Where we last left our hero, Jesus Christ, He was brought before unjust and illegal trial with Annas the high priest. At that trial, Jesus was false declared guilty. With help from the Synoptic Gospels, Christians know that Jesus had to undergo 2 more Jewish trials: one with the high priest Caiaphas and the other with the Sanhedrin. Both of those trials were illegal and unjust, and both of those trials declared Jesus guilty. According to the Jews, Jesus is declared guilty of the blasphemy of calling himself the messiah, the king, and the Son of God. According to the Jewish Law, a man guilty of such crimes is to be executed. But there’s only one thing standing in the way. As we’ll learn later in the text, the Jewish leaders need the Roman leaders’ permission to execute someone. Now Jesus will go from the Jewish courts to Roman courts. Will the verdict be the same? Well, let’s find out.

As promised, I will start where we left in chapter 18, at verse 28. I want to set the scene a little with a reminder from the last chapter’s commentary. On what traditional Christians call “Good Friday,” Jesus underwent 6 trials: 3 were Jewish and 3 were Roman. There 3 Roman trials were, in order, with Pontius Pilate, with Herod, and with Pontius Pilate again. John skips over the trial with Herod for some reason (actually, to be fair, Luke is the only one to mention the trial with Herod). So this will all seem like one trial, but indeed it is 2, and I will point out the divider when I get to it. Perhaps John skipped Herod’s trial because he really wanted to emphasize Pilate’s trials, or maybe he even wanted to emphasize Pontius Pilate himself. Pontius Pilate really was an interesting person. If you are a high school student reading this, and your English teacher has assigned you to do a research paper, and he/she has given you the freedom to choose your topic, choose Pontius Pilate. Like I said, he’s a really interesting guy to learn about. To mix things up a bit, I am going to tell this portion of John focusing around Pontius Pilate. I’m going to do that by giving some introductory information about Pilate’s life before Jesus, then I’m going to go into the text for Christ’s trial under Pilate, and then I’m going to wrap up with the epilogue of Pilate’s life.

Very little is known about Pontius Pilate before he came to Judea, and what little we do know is just tradition and legend (and those traditions and legends probably aren’t the most reliable, either). For example, traditions and legends have stated Pontius Pilate was the illegitimate son of a Roman ambassador and a Scottish woman. Yes, that would mean Pilate would have been half Scottish. But this tradition is easily shot down, as the Romans weren’t anywhere in Britain until after Pilate’s life. More likely, Pontius Pilate was born and raised in central Italy or southern Italy because other people with the same surname have been found there. That would also make more sense because Pontius Pilate’s first job as governor was in that general area, although some traditions and legends claim he was first governor in Gaul, which would be located in France. Whether Pontius Pilate was first a governor in Italy, France, Scotland, Britain, or somewhere else, wherever that place was, Pontius Pilate screwed up. He didn’t screw up bad enough to be executed, imprisoned, or even lose his job, but he did screw up enough to get punished. His punishment was that he was to be governor over the worst part of the Roman Empire that no one wanted to be governor of: Israel/Palestine. I mean, you can’t blame the Roman governors for not wanting to be governor of Israel/Palestine. Think of how bad the Jews are. The Jews hate the non-Jewish people, the Gentiles, so much that they don’t want to even be in the presence of Gentiles. The Jews hated Jewish “half-breeds,” like the Samaritans (half-Jew, half-Assyrian) and Idumeans (half-Jew, half-Roman), that they would not touch, share, or even talk to them. Heck, the Jews even hated each other. Pharisees would hate Sadducees, and Sadducees would hate Pharisees. On top that, you have Essence Jews causing trouble out in the most remote and deserted places, and you have the Zealots assassinating Samaritans, Idumeans, Romans and other Gentiles. Most of the time, the Romans in Israel/Palestine served as the referee, making sure everyone could go about their daily lifestyles in peace without attacking anyone. It was a really hard to task to find ways to make everyone get along. So you can’t blame the Roman governors for wanting to avoid that location. So it almost seemed like perfect timing when Pontius Pilate screwed up and the Roman Senate shuffled the governors, both in 21 A.D. To punish Pontius Pilate, he was going to be the new governor of Israel/Palestine, effective 26 A.D.

So in 26 A.D., Pontius Pilate and his wife packed their bags and moved to the new region he would be governor over. Pontius Pilate settled and built his castle in the town of Caesarea (there are two Caesareas, this Caesarea is the one on the border of the Mediterranean Sea, thus nicknamed “Caesarea Maritime”). Before we move on to our story, I’m going to outline what’s going to happen between now and the trial with Jesus. Pontius Pilate was allowed to remain governor, but he was also reminded that in his new position, if he got 3 strikes, he would be out. Pontius Pilate’s mistake at his last governing position will not be his last. Before the he gets to the trial with Jesus, Pilate will rack up 2 strikes. I’m going to tell you about those strikes.

Sadly, the first strike was as soon as Pontius Pilate arrived in Israel/Palestine. Pontius Pilate had heard the stories about the Jews not getting along with the Gentiles, especially when it came to the Romans. When it came to the Romans, the Jew had a hard time submitting the authority of the Jews. So Pontius Pilate got the idea that best thing to do would be to establish his authority with an iron first and by putting his foot down. To do this, he brought in busts of former emperors and the present emperor, as well busts of the former regional governors and the regional governor, to decorate Galilee, Samaria and Judea, especially in Jerusalem. He also brought in gold shields that declared himself as the high and mighty governor of this late. Those too were put around Judea, especially in Jerusalem. All this was to remind the Jews that the Romans were in charge. The Jews, however, saw this as idolatry, and after being exiled to Babylon for graven images, the Jews learned their lesson and they would not put up with graven images in their land. The Jews responded in peaceful protest, by blocking doorways and laying in the road to create traffic holdup. Word of this got to nearby Roman governor in Syria, and the Syrian governor tattled to the emperor in Rome. The emperor sent word to Pontius Pilate along of the lines of, “The Jews protested in peace, so you should reward peace with peace, and peacefully remove the busts and the shields.” A humbled Pontius Pilate submitted to his emperor’s suggestion and removed all the busts and the shields, but it still went on his record as a bad move. Strike 1.

Further down the road as his career of governor, Pontius Pilate wanted to build an aqueduct that would carry water from Caesarea to Jerusalem. The only problem is Pontius Pilate ran out of money from his Roman governor funds. So Pilate went to the Jewish leaders for funds, mainly to the high priest for money from the temple funds. The Jews didn’t really want the aqueduct in the first place, so of course they said no. But Pilate needed that money, and he wasn’t going to go down without a fight. So Pilate dressed up Roman soldiers to look like the Jewish temple guards. He had them hide their clubs under their clothes. Then, during a festival, when the temple was busy and full of people, the disguised temple guards would enter the temple and steal from the temple treasury. The plan seemed like it would work, but of course someone noticed. Now historians, both ancient ones and modern ones, disagree agree about who struck first, but it resulted in a massacre of Jews and Roman soldiers alike. Once they found out the thieves were Roman soldiers in disguise, it was only a matter of time until it was traced back to Pontius Pilate. This did not go over well with Jews and Romans alike. Heck, this didn’t even go over well with Herod. King Herod hated Pontius Pilate for killing “his subjects” like that. This event was probably what made Herod and Pilate enemies, as mentioned in Luke 23:12 (this event is also possible the event described in Luke 13:1). Strike 2.

Now we are all caught up to the Biblical story in John chapters 18 and 19. Pontius Pilate’s back story wasn’t too long, so I hope you’re still with me. But I think it was totally worth going through it because it really does paint the setting about what’s going to happen. Pontius Pilate has 2 strikes against his name. He knows he got in trouble before by making one mistake in his previous governor job, so he definitely knows he’ll get in big trouble for making 3 big mistakes in his new governor job. He really doesn’t want that 3rd strike. But Pilate is in a tough position. He’s between a rock and hard place. He’s got to please his higher Roman authorities, like the emperor, but he also has to please the Jews. So Pilate is on edge. Keep that in mind as we go into the text. One more thing would be good to note. Remember, this is the Passover season. Jews from all over the Roman Empire are coming into Jerusalem. With the increasing traffic of people, the Romans are expecting things to go down. So just in case, Pontius Pilate and his wife are residing in Jerusalem for the week to make sure everything goes smoothly and be there in case an emergency breaks out. It was that coincidence which would lead the Jewish leaders to bring Jesus before Pilate.

Ok, let’s start at John 18:28. It’s early morning, and this slowly forming mob comes from the Sanhedrin all the way to Pilate’s temporary residence. They’re getting closer to the door when all of a sudden, they stop! They don’t go any further than under the colonnade cover of the house. Why? Jewish customs of the day forbid any Jew from entering the house of Gentile. If they did, they would become unclean. It was a sin to be unclean during the Passover, especially when it came to eating the Passover meal. Only clean Jews could eat the Passover feast. So the Jews waited patiently, maybe yelling a couple times, for Pontius Pilate to come out. How ironic that the Jews, who were planning to murder an innocent man, were worried about cleanliness. It would not be going into a Gentiles house that would make them unclean, but rather, killing an innocent man, that would make them unclean.

Eventually they get Pilate’s attention and Pilate comes out to meet them. Seeing a man bound up, he assumes that the bound-up man is a criminal. So Pilate asks for the charges the Jews brought up against Jesus. Once again, we’re going to have to look towards Luke for the answer, for the thorough Luke has left no detail out. In Luke’s account, the charges the Jews bring against Jesus is that Jesus claims to be the Christ and a king, and that Jesus refuses to pay taxes to Caesar. Obviously, the Jews are trying to use Roman Law to try to convince Pontius Pilate to execute Jesus. But I have to say, I like what the Jews say in John (probably before they give the charges in Luke). In John 18:30, the Jews simply say something along the lines of, “Obviously he’s a criminal. Why else would he bring him to you?” Truth is, the Jews hated Pontius Pilate. They would avoid him at all costs, and they would only talk to if it was absolutely necessary. If the Jews were talking to Pilate, now they needed him. I think that they said this before giving the charges, hoping that tired Pontius Pilate would not be in the mood to argue with them, and thus he would just give them whatever they wanted, even an execution sentence.

Although Pontius Pilate just woke up, he’s a smart man. I bet he took one good look at Jesus and he immediately recognized who he was. Remember Pontius Pilate has been in Jerusalem at least this whole week, and maybe even the week before. So it’s very possible Pilate heard about, or even saw, the Triumphal Entry on Palm Sunday. Perhaps Pilate was thinking to himself, “Hey, isn’t this that guy Jesus, whom they gave a parade on Sunday? Why do they have him all bound up now? I thought they liked him. Is this a trap? Are they trying to trick me into my third strike, so they can get me out of here? Or maybe they’re using reverse psychology and they are using this to cover up a real insurrection! Or maybe they’re using reverse reverse psychology…” By now, if Pilate is thinking such, he’s getting a headache from his head spinning. Maybe he concluded, “Alright, as long as I do the right Roman thing, it doesn’t matter how the Jews respond, the Roman leaders will respect me as a Roman leader, and I won’t get in trouble. So the first step might be to take this case off my hands. Now what can I say or do to get this case off my hands…” Then it hits him. “Aha! They mentioned the Christ. That’s part of the Jews religion, so it has no part with me!”

Pontius Pilate, recognizing that this might be over a religious matter, tells the Jews to judge him by their own law. “There’s only one problem with that,” the Jews say to Pilate. “we have declared him guilty and sentence him to death, but we cannot put anyone to death without your permission.” Pilate has got to be thinking to himself, “Drat. They got a point.” Roman law made it illegal for foreign people to carry out their own executions. The punishment for doing so is execution themselves. The whole reason the Jews are going to Pilate was for the execution permission because only Pilate could give the order to execute. But here’s the tricky part. For Pilate to sentence to death, Pilate also has to declare the defendant guilty. If Pilate declares the defendant not guilty, his verdict vetoes the guilty verdict from the Jews, so much that any punishment towards the defendant is now illegal. So the Jews are now all in, all or nothing.

So Pontius Pilate retreats inside and calls for Jesus to come up. Jesus is sent up. I can imagine Pilate sitting down and saying, “Alright, we’re in private now, I’m not going to tell them what you said. I know how legalistic your leaders can get, and I know how crazy they can get. You just tell me your side of the story, and I bet we can get this all straighten out.” But Jesus says nothing. So Pilate says, “Alright, let’s start with the charges. They said that you said you were their Christ and their king. Is that true? Are you their king? Are you the king of the Jews?” I really like the answer Jesus gives in John 18:34. It’s like Jesus is saying to Pilate, “Did they put that idea into your head, or do you really believe it?” Statements like this, as well as similar statements throughout John’s Gospels and the other Gospels, really make me wonder if Jesus was calling Pontius Pilate to faith. Pilate’s response “Am I Jew?” is a rhetorical question meaning, “I’m not a Jew. I don’t know what makes you a ‘king’ in their religion. I really don’t care. I’m just here to make civil court decisions.” Now Pilate’s next statement has a Greek wordplay in it you won’t recognize unless you can read Greek. Pilate says that Jesus was “handed over.” The Greek word for “handed over” is paredōkan. The Greek word for “betrayed” is paradidous. This is the term used with Judas Iscariot. Notice how closely related they are spelled and sounded out. Some lexical scholars even believe they are coming from the same etymology. Pilate is almost saying, “If you are the king of the Jews, your subjects betrayed you.” Even to Pilate, this is a little bit fishy. Why would the Jews betray their king? Once again, Pilate asks, “What have you done?” and once again, Pilate means, “Tell me your side of the story, and perhaps we can works things out.”

Pay close attention to Christ’s response in John 18:36. You can get a lot out of it. Jesus starts off with two important words: “My kingdom.” The Greek word is basilia, which has been translated both “kingdom” and “reign,” and there’s good theology behind that. In our modern-day minds, “kingdom” is a location, a region, a plot of land, a place. That’s not fully the understanding of ancient people who actually lived in a kingdom. The ancient and medieval understanding of a “kingdom” is the people who the king reigns over. If those people owned land, then the king would be considered the king of the land. He reigns over the people, so he reigns over their land. Jesus was not a king out to take land. Jesus was a king in the hearts of those who believed in Him and followed Him. Christ’s kingdom consisted of his believers who followed His teachings. They were not ones who would form a guerilla army to overthrow the Roman government in a revolution. So Pilate has no need to worry. Perhaps, Jesus is again protecting his disciples. Since the disciples of Jesus would not cause an insurrection, there was no need for the Roman government to go after them.

Unfortunately, Pilate also seems to have a misguided definition of “kingdom.” From “kingdom,” he pulls out the idea that the leader of a kingdom is a “king.” So Pilate exclaims, “Aha! You are a king!” Well, that’s what the NIV says. Most other translations translate as a re-affirmative question, such as “So you are a king?” (as in “So they were right about your claims of being a king?”) Still, the sentence is to be taken a rhetorical understanding positively affirming Jesus to be a king. Since Pilate seems a little surer, Jesus is willing to answer his question fully and truthfully. Indeed Jesus was the king, and he was king in so many ways! First, God is the king of the universe, and Jesus is God, so Jesus is the king of the universe. Second, Jesus is the king because he a descendant of David. If Judah did not mess up the Mosaic Covenant and the Davidic Covenant, then Israel would be a monocratic kingdom, and the king would be, in accordance to the Davidic line, Jesus! Third (and the third one hits home to what Jesus was saying in the rest of the verse), Jesus was the king in the lives of everyone who believed in Jesus and believed in His teaching, the truth. In three ways, Jesus is the king!

Another priceless line from Pilate, Pontius Pilate utters a line that would make any postmodernist proud: “What is truth?” I can almost hear Pilate literally uttering that line under his breath, “Yeah, but what is truth?” Many different interpretations have gone out with this line. Some have said Pilate was inquiring about “The Truth” that Jesus spoke of, while others say Pilate is demanding a clear-cut, “yes” or “no,” answer to the question, “Are you the king of the Jews?” But I think the best interpretation is the postmodern one, that Pilate is being sarcastically skeptical towards epistemology (the philosophical search for truth). Here the Jews were telling Pilate that Jesus was obviously guilty of falsely calling himself a king and Christ, and he needs to be executed. Jesus is claiming that he’s running a non-violent kingdom of some far away place. In Pilate’s mind (as we’ll talk about soon), Jesus is somewhere between a liar and a lunatic, but definitely not guilty of treason or an insurrection. So Pilate wonders, “Which one of us is right? How can all 3 of us be right? Is there really truth if all 3 of us claim that our answer is the truth?” What Pilate doesn’t know, and what Christians do know, is the source of truth comes from Jesus. After all, it was only a few chapters ago Jesus declared “I am the truth.” Truth only comes from Jesus. All who speak the way of Jesus speak truth, but those who speak against the teachings of Jesus speak against truth.

Now we’re going to take a pause right in the middle of the verse to ponder what Pontius is pondering. The Jews have brought forth a man who they say claims that He is the Christ and the King of the Jews. They even try to throw in that He won’t pay taxes to Caesar in order to prove he’s against the Roman government. When Pilate questions him one-on-one, Jesus talks about a kingdom, but he talks about one that’s far away. He doesn’t have a history of violence; in fact, he sounds rather peaceful. All he wants to do is teach the truth. Things aren’t adding up, in comparison to the other people who tried to lead rebellions. They all formed a large army. Jesus only had twelve disciples, and none of them are in sight (well, two might be nearby, but the one is keeping a safe distance and the other one is denying he even knew Jesus). All the other insurrectionists were loud and putting up a fight. Jesus stands there quiet and relaxed all bound up. All the other insurrectionists had to be imprisoned or executed because they were violent threats to the local people and overall government. Jesus seems to be no threat whatsoever. I wondered if Pilate thought that Jesus either was saying He had a kingdom when Jesus knew he didn’t, or Jesus seriously believed He had a kingdom, when (in Pilate’s eyes), he didn’t. So possibly Pilate is now concluding that Jesus is either a liar or a lunatic, but either way, he’s not guilty. He’s innocent. Pilate can find no basis to charge Jesus. So in Pilate’s conscience, Pilate cannot pass an execution on Jesus. But it’s not that easy. The Jews are screaming bloody murder for this guy’s body on a cross. So Pontius must ponder how to set Jesus free, and yet appease the Jews at the same time.

So Pontius Pilate’s first move is to completely take the decision off his hands and put it on someone else’s hands, that someone else being Herod. Between verses 38 and 39 of John 18 is when Jesus is sent to trial with Herod. I’m not going into detail with Herod’s trial of Jesus because that’s only in Luke, and this is a study of John, not Luke. But I will discuss why Jesus goes off to Herod. It seems like Pontius Pilate is forced to make a decision, when all of a sudden it hits him, “Wait! Herod’s in town!” Herod was an Idumean, a half-Roman and half-Jew. He was in Jerusalem for Passover because he was a Roman and a Jew. Since he was a Jew, he was required to celebrate the Passover in Jerusalem. Since was a Roman, employed the Romans, he too was in Jerusalem for crowd control. Herod’s main control was over Galilee. Since Jesus was a Galilean, it made sense that Jesus should be sentenced by his king, who is both under Jewish law and Roman law. Under Jewish Law, Herod could pronounce someone guilty over religious matters. Under Roman Law, Herod could execute people. It made more sense for Herod to sentence Jesus than Pilate. The Jews go along with this, but Herod does not. Herod passes Jesus back to Pontius Pilate, passing no judgment whatsoever. It’s up to Pontius Pilate again. Pilate’s first attempt to set Jesus free failed and appeased the Romans.

If anything, sending Jesus to Herod at least stalled Pontius Pilate for time. Perhaps while Jews and the Jewish mob were at Herod’s Palace, Pilate was thinking up a Plan B in case it came back to him. He may have thought, “Alright, this seems to be that Sanhedrin’s idea to execute him. But from what I remembered last Sunday, the lower class and social outcast Jews seem to love him. So if maybe there’s some way I can use that majority of the Jews, I can get Jesus out of this mess.” By the time the unruly Jewish mob gets back to Pontius Pilate, Pilate has already devised a plan. “Here’s what I’ll do,” Pontius Pilate announces to the crowd. “I will declare Jesus guilty and put him under arrest, but I won’t sentence him just yet. I just remembered that this is your Passover. In accordance with the treaty we made with you, I have agreed to follow your custom to pardon a prisoner. Would you like me to pardon Jesus, or pardon Barabbas? How about we pardon Jesus, and say we broke even?”

Now there’s got to be a little discussion here on Barabbas. First of all, his name alone is interesting. Broken down, it’s “Bar-“ and “abbas.” Bar- is the prefix meaning “Son of.” Abbas means Father. His name literally means “Son of the father,” but in the Jewish name’s context, it could very well mean, “Son of The Father” or “Son of God.” To make things even more interesting, some manuscripts give Barabbas as the last name, and the full name, “Jesus Barabbas.” So here you have 2 men named Jesus, and Pilate asks, “Which Jesus does you want?” Pilate has two men called “The Son of God” and Pilate asks, “Which Son of God do you want?” While the two men had very similar names, they couldn’t be further apart in personality. Barabbas was anti-Jesus, if you will. Barabbas had quite the rap sheet. The charges he was declared guilty of was theft, murder, treason, rebellion and insurrection. Barabbas was know to be a member of Zealots and a member of a Jewish resistance movement established to overthrow the Roman government at whatever costs possible. Barabbas was a violent man, willing to hurt or kill any Roman, or even any Jew who disagreed with him or got in his way to domination. Matthew even kind of hints that he’s been in and out of prison a couple times!

I can imagine Pontius Pilate smirking and saying to himself, “I got them now! This is so perfect! I declared Jesus guilty, so that will make the Jewish leaders happy. All the other Jews, like the lower class Jews won’t want their beloved Jesus killed, so they will speak out against their leaders. I’ll pardon him, and that will make all the other Jews happy. It will make me happy too. Not only can I set free an innocent man with a clean conscience, I don’t have to worry about pardoning a dangerous and violent man, but I can put him to death. Come on now, you Jews, pick the obviously right one.” It’s true, Jesus was the obviously right one to set free, in the Roman mindset. In the Roman mindset, Barabbas was a threat to society, but Jesus was not. So in the Roman mindset, it made sense to release Jesus and to execute Barabbas.

It isn’t as obvious in the Jewish mindset. They wanted Barabbas! Why would the Jews want a violent and dangerous man free but would one a wise teacher and a healer killed? You really have to think about it in a Jewish mindset, or in the terms Jews vs. Romans. Yes, Barabbas was harmful and dangerous, but he was also a hero of the resistance to the Roman government and a hero to those who hated the Romans. A vote for Barabbas was a vote against the Roman government. On top of that, I think some of the Jews saw through Pilate’s smokescreen and they realized that Pilate wanted them to pick Jesus. So picking Jesus would be siding with Pilate, which would be like place a pro-Rome vote. On that same note, remember in John 9:23 and John 12:42, the reader learns that anyone who sided with Jesus was excommunicated from the Jews. The Jewish people might have worried that if they chose Jesus, the Jewish leaders would pick them out and shun them. Fearing the shun, the Jewish people followed the lead of the Sanhedrin. One more thing may be a possibility to note, and it all centers around disappointment. The Jerusalem people gave Jesus the Palm Sunday parade because they might have hoped Jesus would start a revolution that week. When Jesus did not start any kind of revolt, the people were disappointed and no longer willing to follow Jesus. Pontius Pilate’s second attempt truly failed, or should I say, backfired. Not only was Pilate unable to set free the innocent Jesus, but he also had to let loose a dangerous and violent Barabbas. For all Pilate knew, Barabbas would start another revolt and end up back in jail by the end of year.

Now let’s enter John 19. Pilate gets that the Jewish crowd is crying out for blood. So his third attempt is to compromise by just giving a little blood. Pilate finds no charge against Jesus, but he’ll punish him with a lighter punishment of a flogging. When I say “lighter punishment,” do not take that lightly. A Roman flogging wasn’t an easy thing to bear. The Romans had perfected flogging. It wasn’t just a whip. It was a whip that had multiple cords, and each cord had a spiked ball-bearing (or pieces of bone) at the end. Not only did this kind of whip hurt when the leather lashed out across your back, but it would literally tear the skin, and sometimes even the muscle off of your back. By the time the flogging was done, the flogged person’s back looked like raw ground beef. In some cases, some people would die from flogging alone. Flogging was nasty, so nasty that some historians claim that Roman citizens could not be flogged. Of course, since the governor did not observe the flogging, sometimes Romans soldiers would take the time to do whatever they pleased. They would mock or torment the victim. They held none of that back for Jesus. Since Jesus was charged as a king, the soldiers mocked Jesus by pretending He was a king, even giving him a purple robe, a crown of thorns (remember than crowns in ancient Rome were laurel reefs around the head), and even mockingly exclaiming, “Hail, king of the Jews!” Matthew and Mark add that he was also spit on during this time.

After Jesus is flogged, Pontius Pilate brings out Jesus to present him as punished to the Jewish people, hoping this is enough for the Jews. When Jesus comes out, Pontius Pilate says in the NIV, “Here is the man!” but I like better the other translations that say, “Behold the man!” If I were to paraphrase this into longer sentences, Pilate is saying to the Jewish crowd, “See, I punished him. He seems to have learned his lesson. Is this good enough for you?” Apparently, it’s not, for as soon as Jesus sets foot out, the Jewish leads cry out for Jesus to be crucified. This was a sad day for the Jews. The Jews hated crucifixion and they believed no man deserves it. Yet here they are, crying out for Jesus to be crucified. Pilate insists for a third time the he cannot find a basis for accusation. In Pilate’s mind, Jesus is still innocent. Pilate even cries out, “You crucify him!” The Jews reply, “Pilate, you know it doesn’t work that way, we need you to declare him guilty and pass the sentence of crucifixion. Our law has clearly told us to execute anyone who claims to be the Son of God. We did our part by holding the trial and giving him a guilty verdict. Now you do your job and pass the sentence of cricufixion”

The next verse, John 19:8, describes Pontius Pilate as afraid. Most scholars believe the fear is over the loud, blood-thirsty Jewish crowd. Pontius Pilate is beginning to fear if they don’t get their way, a revolt will break out in Jerusalem. If they succeed, Pontius Pilate will be kicked out of the land, or even executed! Even in the Romans won and subdued the Jewish crowd, Pilate would have to answer back to Rome why a riot broke out in the city where he was residing. If that was the case, the obvious answer would seem to be to give into the Jews’ demands, but that’s easier than it sounds. First of all, it would make it look like a Roman government was giving into the conquered people. Second, the Roman governor was expected to hold to the Roman law. If Pilate could not find a reason to declare Jesus guilty under Roman law, but passed an execution away, it would seem like Pilate is not following Roman law, but rather Jewish law. That doesn’t look good to the emperor, either. These ideas are the view most schlolars hold on, but there’s a minor view that some scholars take up, too. In Roman mythology, there are many myths about Roman gods disguising themselves as men to test and judge Romans. It’s very possible Pilate might thought this about Jesus. He might have heard Jesus, the followers of Jesus, or even the enemies of Jesus, call Jesus the “Son of God.” Perhaps Pilate heard of some of the miracles Jesus performed. Or maybe Pilate thought Jesus was a god because He was innocent, too innocent. Either way, Pilate might be serious thinking Jesus is one of these gods, doing of one of these tests. This minority view helps make sense of the question in verse 9: “Where do you come from?” It might Pilate trying to get Jesus to reveal He is a god. But going back to the majority view, Pilate is saying this to just uncover something, anything, that might give Pilate some proof that the Jews can’t argue with to declare him innocent. Yet Jesus won’t give it to Pilate. Jesus remains silent. Most scholars believe this is because Jesus already answered that question with His answers in chapter 18, so Jesus sees no reason to repeat them. I would like the throw in also that maybe it’s because Jesus had the Father’s will in mind and didn’t want to defend himself, but rather go to the cross to pay for the sins of mankind. At the least, it fulfilled the prophecy found in Isaiah 53:7.

By John 19:10, Pontius Pilate is irritated with Jesus. Perhaps some of the irritation was due to his fear. Here Pontius Pilate is doing everything is his power to set Jesus free, yet Jesus doesn’t seem to be helping. Pilate asks, “Don’t you get it? I am controlling the balance to whether you go free or you die on the cross.” Jesus speaks boldly to Pilate, reminding him the only reason Pilate is the governor of Israel/Palestine is because God authorized from above. Apart from God’s authorization, it would not happen. This goes wonderfully in line with Romans 13:1. All authorities have been established by God, whether Jewish or Gentile, Christian or non-Christian. This includes Pontius Pilate. If there is any connection between the Roman trials in John 18-19, and the Jewish trials in John 18, it all comes back to the last thing Jesus said to Pontius Pilate. Both authorities were put into place by God, yet both authorities refused to recognize when God’s Son was placed before them in court. For if they did recognize the Son of God on trial, they would declare Him innocent. But they did not recognize the Son of God, so they declared him guilty, and therefore, they are guilty. There’s been debate about who the one guilty of the greater sin, but I believe in this context, it’s the Jewish people, because they have the Law and the History to figure out who the Messiah is, and yet they still missed it. Pontius Pilate does not have this history or the text to figure out the Messiah, so he is not as guilty, but still guilty.

John 19:11 starts out by saying, “From then on, Pilate tried to set Jesus free…” but if you ask me, it seems like Pilate had always been trying to set Jesus free. I think the phrase in verse 11 could be re-worded, “Pilate tried other ways to convince the Jews to let Jesus go” or “Pilate tried harder to free Jesus.” By this time, the Jews actually try to help Pontius Pilate. Pilate claimed there was no Roman law to convict Jesus by, so the Jews were going to help Pilate find a Roman law. The Jews pretty much say Pilate, “When we said Jesus called himself ‘king,’ we really meant Jesus called himself ‘Caesar.’ Isn’t another man calling himself the emperor of Rome treason? Then letting him go would be committing treason as well. You wouldn’t want to commit treason, would you?” Well, that helped Pilate greatly. By no means did Pilate want Jews reporting back to the emperor of Rome that he let a man who claimed to be Caesar go. That would definitely be strike 3. He could bend what the Jews were saying to fit that as a charge for treason. It would be following both the Roman law and the Jewish law. Therefore, the decision would please Jews and Roman alike. The only thing in Pilate’s way was a gut feeling and a guilty conscience. But Pilate had to act fast, for if he didn’t he’d either be facing a Jewish riot or a bad report sent to Rome.

Pontius Pilate takes his seat on the Stone Pavement, a judgment seat in a public square where judges made their rulings, verdicts and sentences public for all to witness. Since it was public and in the presence of witnesses, all rulings, verdicts and sentences made on the Stone Pavement judgment seat were official. Pilate one more time states the charges, “Here is your king. Do you want him crucified?” But the Jews shout “Take him away! Crucify him! We have no king but Caesar!” Another sad moment in Jewish history. I don’t believe John, nor the apostles in Acts, were being anti-Semitic, but after that last statement, you can’t blame them for sounding anti-Semitic. They blatantly reject the Messiah they’ve been waiting so long for. They blatantly reject a true Jewish king. Worse part, they blatantly reject God as their God and their king. If there’s anything worse than that, they rejected their Messiah, King and God, not for another Jew, but for a Gentile, one of the same nationality and ethnicity of the person they refused to even step a foot in his house.

If there’s one thing I noticed between John 18 and John 19, it’s another role reversal. This time it’s not between Jesus and the Jewish leaders, but it’s between the Jews and the Romans with their corresponding laws. Look back at the conversations between the Jews and the Romans over their laws. At first the Jews say Jesus is guilty by the Jewish Law, while the Roman governor says Jesus is innocent over the Roman law. But by the end of the conversation, the Roman governor is trying to appease to the Jews with the Jewish law, and the Jews are trying to appease with the Romans with the Roman law. Yet one thing remains true over all this. The true authority is not the Jewish authority, nor is it the Roman authority. The true authority is from God. God has handed down a little authority to the Jews and a little authority to the Gentiles, but he has given it all to Jesus.

So Pilate, seeing there is no way to talk the Jews out of this, and afraid that a Jewish riot might happen, which would result in his strike, passed a sentence of crucifixion. He might have tried to justify it, convincing himself he did the right thing by giving the Jews what they wanted and by protecting the Roman government for a Caesar wannabe. Yet I bet his conscience was still bothering him. He knew Jesus did nothing wrong. He knew Jesus wasn’t a threat to anyone’s safety. He knew that the Jews only wanted Jesus dead because they were jealous. On top of his own conscience, poor Pilate had his wife even telling him it was wrong (see Matthew 27:19). Yet Pilate made a decision for his own safety and his own career.

This isn’t the end of our story with Pontius Pilate. He’s got one more job to do. Crucifixions were done out in the open, not only to teach the criminals a lesson, but also to teach the people a lesson. The lesson was simple: Don’t commit crimes against the Roman Empire or you will die a painful death. To help fully understand the lesson, the judge would make a sign or a notice to nail on top of the cross describing the crime the person committed. So the sign might say, “Thief,” “Robber,” “Murder,” “Started a riot,” “Started in insurrection,” etc. Furthermore, it was written in the top 3 lingua francas (most spoken language) of the day so everyone, Roman citizen and foreigner, could understand the message. You can tell when Pilate wrote the sign, he was still upset at the Jews for killing an innocent man out of their jealousy. So he subtly messes with the Jews. He writes on the sign (combining all 4 Gospel accounts), “This is Jesus of Nazareth, King of the Jews.” Now the Jews are upset about this. They say the sign should read, “This man claimed to be the King of the Jews.” Do you see the difference? The Jews are still insisting the crime is that Jesus blasphemed by calling himself God, Christ and the king. That’s the crime he’s being punished for. But Pilate sees right through their smokescreen. He knows they killed him out a jealous. Pilate is sending across a clear message, “This is how the Jews treat their king.” When the chief priests demand the sign to be changed, Pilate says, “Oops! Too late! It’s already up there. No turning back now.”

Now we’re going to take break from Pilate because there a few things I want to point out in the rest of this chapter. But for the sake of time and space, I’m not going to hit every point. The points I will hit are the ones unique to John’s Gospel account.

John’s Gospel names 4 women at the cross on Golgotha. John says these 4 women were Mary the mother of Jesus, her sister, Mary the wife of Clopas, and Mary Magdalene. This is a lot of Marys. It will be ironic that the women, the last people to see Jesus alive, will be the first people to see Jesus come back to life. How does John know these women are there? Apparently, John was there himself. It makes sense that only in John’s Gospel that John would mentioned being there. No other writer would no this because they were not there. Matthew wasn’t there, he fled. Same with Peter, one of the main sources of Mark. John will later reaffirm he was there to the end, in John 19:35,36. Jesus sees both his mother and his first cousin, his beloved disciple John. Jesus instructs John to take care of his mother for him until she dies. This was a very noble thing for Jesus to do. In the Jewish customs of the 1st century, it was the oldest son’s responsibility to take in the mother when she was elderly and widowed. Since Jesus knew he wasn’t going to be around, he asked his closest friend and first cousin to do the task.

Ok, maybe this next part isn’t unique to John, but I always like to mention it. Jesus asks for a drink, only to refuse it. Why would Jesus ask for a drink to only refuse it? John’s Gospel is the only Gospel that records Jesus asking for it. Some has suggested it’s a fulfillment of prophecy, such as Psalm 69:21. Others say it was for Jesus to reveal his humanity by displaying a human need. Yet others have even presented it as a paradox, that the source of spiritual Living Water needed physical water. They give Jesus wine vinegar, a sour wine, raised up on the stalk of the hyssop plant, possibly putting some hyssop in the wine vinegar. If this wine vinegar got into any of Christ’s wounds, it would burn painfully, but if Jesus digested it, it would act as a slight painkiller. The Synoptic Gospels tell us Jesus refused. It may simply be remember that He promised He would not take part in any wine until the kingdom of God comes (see Luke 22:18), but maybe Jesus refused it because he refused to kill any pain. He was willing to go through the worst pain possible in order to save humankind from their sins. If there is one thing that John uniquely says about this passage, it’s the hyssop plant detail. This could simply be John using details, but it’s a possible John may be make a link to the Passover. At the Passover, the lamb’s blood was sprinkled with a branch of the hyssop plant. It’s a possible link to Jesus, the ultimate Passover lamb.

John ends the life of Jesus with Jesus saying, “It is finished,” obviously referring to the fact that Jesus finished everything the Father had willed for him, from his teaching ministry to the redemptive work on the cross. The death of Jesus is an odd one. Usually, in crucifixion, a person slowly and painfully died. A person could remain on the cross days, if not weeks, until that person died. The crucifixion of Jesus was indeed a painful one, but not as slow. Jesus died in a couple of hours, and he died all at once. If you really want to give a scientific answer, it was probably because of the blood loss from the flogging, but I rather simply believe it was the time the Father had planned for Jesus to die. Interesting enough, John does not mention any effects of Jesus giving up his life. No earthquake, no splitting rocks, no dead prophets coming to life, not even the centurions making a faith statement (especially odd when the faith statement in Matthew and Mark is that Jesus is the Son of God). Most importantly, John does not mention the temple curtain splitting into two, which all 3 Synoptic Gospel writers mention. You would think John would have that important theological event happening, but once again, I will remind you that if John has nothing new to add, he won’t add it.

What John uniquely mentions is the descriptive process of the burial. John reminds his Jewish readers that the Law states that a dead body cannot be hung on a tree (or cross in this case) over night or over a Sabbath. Because of the long process of crucifixion, the Jews would normally allow bodies to stay up overnight if they were Gentiles being crucified. But in this case you have a Jew being crucified. And this isn’t any ordinary night coming up. This is a Sabbath, more specifically the Passover Sabbath, a special Sabbath. The Jews wanted to make sure they were following the Law (once again, very ironic, because the Jews broke the law by rejecting and killing the Prophet like Moses) so they asked Pontius Pilate to speed the process up. The Romans discovered the crucifixion could be sped up by breaking the legs. In this way, the crucified person suffocated just as much as drowning in their internal lung fluid. Indeed, we know this is historically true because archaeologist have discovered crucified bodies with broken legs. So the Roman soldiers are going around, breaking the legs of the criminals still dying (the Bible states two men next to Jesus also being crucified, but it’s very possible there could be more), and they come to Jesus. They look at Jesus, and I imagine one soldier saying to the other, “I think he’s already dead.” Then I picture the other soldier say to him, “Well, let’s make sure.” Now what’s the logical thing to do? I think the logical thing to do would be to break his legs anyway, just in case. Yet they don’t do this. Instead, they poke his side with a spear and pierce Jesus again. Why did they do this instead of breaking his legs? John declares it was to fulfill a prophecy, as well as make him the perfect sacrifice. The Old Testament said that the sacrificial lamb could not have any broken bones. For Jesus to be the perfect sacrifice, his bones could not be broken. God prevented Jesus from having any bones broken. Instead, Jesus had his side pierced. John uniquely mentions that out of the piercing, blood and water flowed. There is nowhere near enough time to explain all the interpretations of this. Some scholars take it very literally and very medically. They believe the spear punctured the lung of Jesus, and crucifixion fills the lungs with blood and other internal fluids, like serum and water. Other scholars have taken it symbolically, that it is the blood of Jesus the Living Water that saves us from our sins and gives us eternal life. But I think that the overall picture we’re to understand is that Jesus was really dead. He was fully dead, not unconscious or in a coma. It also reveals Jesus to be a human, not just God appearing to be human, as some early cult group claimed.

As do all the Gospel writers, John credits Joseph of Arimathea for asking Pontius Pilate for the body. Mark and Luke tell us that Joseph of Arimathea was a member of the Sanhedrin and both say he was looking forward to the kingdom of God, hinting that he believed Jesus was bringing about that kingdom. Both Matthew and John tell us that Joseph of Arimathea was follower of Jesus. Matthew uniquely says that Joseph was a rich man. Luke uniquely says that Joseph voted against the guilty verdict the Sanhedrin put on Jesus. John uniquely adds Joseph was a secret disciple because he feared what the Jews would do to him if he openly confessed. But Mark uniquely reveals that Joseph boldly went to Pilate for the body. I think that means that Joseph wasn’t trying to cover up to the Sanhedrin why he wanted to bury the body. Sick of their decisions and actions, Joseph boldly proclaimed his faith by serving Jesus this one last time.

Nicodemus must have witnessed Joseph’s bold moves because Nicodemus followed suit. He also was sick of the Jews’ hatred towards Jesus and He wanted to serve the great teacher one last time, too. Nicodemus is credited with providing the equipment needed for a proper burial according to Jewish customs. He provided 75 pounds of myrrh and aloes, perfumes used to cover up the stench and decay of a rotting body. Joseph and Nicodemus dressed Jesus in the proper burial clothes. Nearby in a garden was a tomb, meant for one person, and it had never been used. From the descriptions, scholars have noted this is a tomb meant for the rich. The poor had to share tombs with the extended family. Poor families could not afford garden maintenance around their tomb. This was a tomb meant for a rich man. Joseph of Arimathea, a rich man, spent a lot of money to buy this time. He intended to use it for himself, but seeing it was the closest tomb to where Jesus was crucified, Joseph thought it was best to put Jesus in there instead. Thus, he was buried like a rich man, fulfilling Isaiah 53:9. This concludes John 19.

Back to Pontius Pilate. Believe it or not, the guilty sentence and execution of Jesus was not strike 3 for Pilate. History doesn’t really say why. There is no official Roman record from the Roman government declaring what the greater Roman government thought of Pilate’s decision. If I were to take a guess, I bet they had no problem with it. Pilate prevented further rioting and a possible insurrection. So if that meant killing a man to do so, then fine, do it. Yet that does not take Pilate off the hook. The Early Church Fathers all criticized Pontius Pilate for his decision. Jewish historians Josephus and Philo criticize Pilate for his actions. Even the Roman historian Taticus, a Roman and a worshipper of the pagan Roman gods, only notes Pilate for the death of Jesus, even above all his other famous (or should I say “infamous”) decisions. So throughout all of history, it doesn’t matter if you are Christian, Jewish, Gentile or Pagan, you’ll know Pontius Pilate from his role in the death of Jesus.

You’re probably wondering, “What could Pilate do that worse than this?” Well, it all happened in 36 A.D., a couple years after He sentenced Jesus to death. Part of Pontius Pilate’s jurisdiction was Samaria as well as Judea. So yes, Pilate was in charge of making sure the Jews and the Samaritans got along, not an easy task. Now before I get any further, I’m going to have to remind you of the cultural tension between the Jews and the Samaritans so this makes sense. Remember that the Jews would not allow Samaritans to worship at the temple on Mount Zion, so the Samaritans had to build their own temple on Mount Gerazim, and to the Jews’ disliking because the Jews claimed that the true temple was the one on Mount Zion. In order to justify their actions, the Samaritans had to re-write the Pentateuch, calling it the Samaritan Pentateuch, in order to re-adjust their justifications. For example, according to the Samaritan Pentateuch, Abraham almost sacrificed Isaac on Mount Gerazim, not Mount Moriah/Zion. Yet the Samaritans had very little proof for it. Well, in 36 A.D. a Samaritan prophet, who claimed to be the Samaritan Messiah, also claimed that God led him to discover the sacred vessels used in the original Tabernacle on Mount Gerazim. To him, as well as his followers, this was proof that the Tabernacle was originally set up on Mount Gerazim, and therefore, the Samaritans had enough proof, in their minds, that the temple on Mount Gerazim was the true one. The Jews, greatly angered by this false prophet, protested Pontius Pilate to do something. Pilate, continuing to try to win the Jews over, and also feeling uneasy about the large gathering at Mount Gerazim, sends a cavalry and heavily armed infantry to subdue the crowd. As with Pilate’s second strike, it’s unclear who attacked first, but the collision between the Samaritans and the Roman soldiers led to a full out brawl, leaving several Samaritans and Roman soldiers dead or dying, much more than the massacre of Jews when Pontius Pilate stole from the temple treasury. Of course, Pilate blamed the Samaritan false prophet and had him executed. But that did not clear everything up with Pilate. The Samaritans told on Pilate to a nearby Vitellius, the Roman governor of Syria, and Vitellius tattled on Pilate to Tiberius, the Roman emperor. Strike 3.

With strike 3, Pilate is out. In 36 A.D., Pilate was removed from the office of governor of Judea. Most likely, Pilate was removed from any governor position, if not any government position. From there, it is any good guess what happened to Pilate, for no historical source really records it. Just like the early years of Pilate, the later years of Pilate can only be found in traditions and legends. A lot of traditions state that Pilate committed suicide, most likely by hanging. Perhaps it was depression over repeated failures of being governor, or maybe Pilate was still feeling guilty about putting to death Jesus. Some of those traditions even say that the Caesar gave Pilate the option of killing himself or getting killed by the emperor, in which Pilate chose the former. Some legends say Pilate was executed by the Caesar. Most likely because his failures at being governor were seemed a crime against the Roman Empire, but there is another possibility. The other possibility stems from the idea that if an emperor executed him, it would be Emperor Nero. Nero is famous to Christians as the emperor who hated Christians. If he loved anything about Christians, he loved killing Christians. According to one traditional source, Pontius Pilate struggled every day with the fact he had Jesus executed. One day, however, word got around to Pilate that a handful of believers reported seeing Jesus alive again, and they believed he was the Son of God. According to this tradition, Pilate heard the news, believed in Jesus as the Christ and the Son of God, and came to faith. When Nero heard that one of his governors had become a Christian, Nero would not put up with and Nero had Pilate executed immediately, making Pilate a martyr of the faith. As lovely as this sounds, most scholars believe this source is pseudopigrapha, or “false writings.” Very few hold to it as true.

As we come to our close (sorry this is getting so long), I want us to go back to what we always do, and talk about two things. First, how does this chapter put to light the purpose John is trying to convey to the Christian reads? Second, how does John expect the Christian reads to apply this to our lives? Let’s start with the first question. How does the trial between Pontius Pilate and Jesus, as well as the crucifixion and burial of Jesus, reveal Jesus to be the Christ and the Son of God? Let’s start off by stating the obvious. John uses many Old Testament Scripture references within this passage to relate that Jesus is fulfilling prophecy. Even when Old Testament Scripture is not quoted, the Christian reader can connect what is happening to Jesus to Scripture in the Old Testament. Jesus is seen fluffing Messianic prophecy, making Jesus clearly the Messiah, or the Christ. It’s ironic that all Christians can see Jesus fulfilling the Messianic prophecy in his death, but the Jewish leaders who were suppose be experts in the Scriptures could not see it. On a slightly similar note, John shows us in this passage many references to the Passover and to Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement. Jesus is seen as the sacrificial lamb who will pays for the sins of the world, once for all. He is the Passover lamb because He is without blemish, not so much physically, but spiritually, as in he has no sin. The Passover lamb could not have any bones broken, and Christ’s bones were never broken. The prophecies of the Messiah and the typology to the Passover lamb are too similar to be separated. The Christ is the Passover Lamb.

Moving on to our second question, how does the stories of the trials, crucifixion and burial of Jesus relate to our lives? For some reason or another, what really stuck out to be was what Jesus said about the power of the authorities in John. Let me bring up the verse that really stuck out to be on this subject

John 19:10,11-
10 “Do you refuse to speak to me?” Pilate said. “Don’t you realize I have power either to free you or to crucify you?” 11 Jesus answered, “You would have no power over me if it were not given to you from above. Therefore the one who handed me over to you is guilty of a greater sin.”

Even though this is only said to Pilate, the Roman governor, I really believe Jesus could have said to Annas or Caiaphas as well. Jesus had the power, the authority and the resources to prevent himself from being arrested, being imprisoned and being executed. Yet Jesus did not use them. Jesus allowed the authorities in power to do as they chose to. Clearly, everyone from Annas to Pilate was not godly men. Yet God used these men to bring apart his plan for salvation, even if it did not seem like godly actions were going on. Today, in America, as well as around the world, people tend to worry about how Godly or how Christian a president or a prime minister is. They will sharply oppose any politician or leader who does not proclaim faith to God or Jesus, and they are highly critical of actions that don’t seem Godly or Christian. The trial between Jesus and Pilate reminds Christians that things can sway either way, and who that person says they are may not always match up with their actions. Annas and Caiaphas were high priests. They were supposed to be the most spiritual Jews on the face of the earth. Yet they cast a verdict that was opposing God. In the same way, politicians can claim they are Christian, but that doesn’t mean every act they do will be Christian. Christians cannot simply mark every action they do as a good, godly action because they claim their action. Things are true on the opposite end, too. Pontius Pilate was a Roman, probably worshipping the pagan Roman gods. Yet Pontius Pilate knew that Jesus was innocent, and he even entertained the thought Jesus might be the Son of God. Even though Pilate did go through with the sentence, God used him to bring about salvation to the world. The Old Testament is full of examples where Gentile kings act godly in accordance with God’s will. When we see this, we must wonder, “Can God use even ungodly leaders to bring about His will and His plan for humanity?” If that is the case, we must not be harsh on the presidents and prime ministers that seem to be ungodly or not Christian. Even if their actions are not Christian or ungodly, God still might be using them. And when these leaders do act godly, we must praise them for it, and encourage it more.

Since this is quite a depressing subject, let me end with a joke, and a non-heretic one, too, that will perfectly transition us into the next chapter. Joseph of Arimathea spent a lot of money to buy an expensive tomb for Jesus. This baffled a lot of Joseph’s family and friends, on why he would spend so much money a controversial person that Joseph barely knew. Joseph’s friends and family questioned Joseph on why he spent so much money on a tomb for Jesus and not a tomb for himself. Joseph simply replied, “Don’t worry, it’s only for the weekend.” 🙂

John 18: The Jewish People v. Jesus Christ

As always, let’s start with the setting of John 18. Jesus and his disciples crossed the Kidron Valley to go to the Mount of Olives, and on the Mount of Olives, Jesus prayed in a garden on the mountain, the Garden of Gethsemane. It will be on the Mount of Olives, possibly in the Garden of Gethsemane, where Jesus will meet up with Judas Iscariot to be betrayed. The setting is important because of the irony. If you remember my discussion about Judas Iscariot in John 13, I mentioned that the original context of the Psalm 41 passage foretelling of the Messiah’s betrayer, in its original context, was most likely talking about Ahithophel, David’s trustworthy and honorable companion, who also betrayed David. I did much comparison between Ahithophel and Judas. The setting here is another one. Ahithophel also betrayed David somewhere between the Kidron Valley and the Mount of Olives, most likely the Mount of Olives (see 2 Samuel 15:30-31). Judas would fulfill the role of betrayer perfectly again by choosing to betray Jesus on the Mount of Olives. The text tells the Judas Iscariot was well aware that Jesus and the disciples would be there because Jesus had often gone to the Mount of Olives with his disciples when he was in Jerusalem.

Judas Iscariot came well prepared to take on Jesus. First, he made sure he had the right crowd of people, consisting of both Jews and Romans. For the Jews, John records Judas Iscariot bringing chief priests and Pharisee officials. Mark adds that there were teachers of the law and elders there, too. As for the Romans, John tells us Judas Iscariot had a large amount of Roman soldiers. The NIV uses the term “detachment of soldiers,” but a better translation would be “a cohort of soldiers,” like the NASB uses, because a cohort is a legitimate measure of soldiers in the Roman army. In the Roman army, a cohort was a subdivision of a legion. A legion would be divided into ten parts, and a tenth of a legion is a cohort. Since a legion is about 6,000 soldiers, a cohort would be about 600 soldiers. You might be thinking this is kind of large for arresting one man, even overkill, but this was nothing new for the Romans. If the Romans thought arresting one man might be dangerous, they would take along several soldiers to make sure nothing went wrong. Even Paul was accompanied by 200 soldiers when he was transferred (see Acts 23:23). If the Jews had made it sound like Jesus was declaring himself to be the new king and starting an insurrection with his disciples, the Romans might have thought that arresting such a man might start and insurrection, so they had to be prepared. Not only were they prepared in numbers of people, but also in equipment. John says everyone was carrying torches, lanterns and weapons. Matthew and Mark are more specific on the weapons: swords and clubs.

Now it may seem Judas Iscariot laid the perfect trap, know where Jesus was, but that’s far from the truth. Jesus, being the all-knowing God, knew what was going to happen to him, as stated in John 18:4. It is almost like Jesus allowed himself to be trapped. Jesus asks the mob “Who is it you want?” The mob replies, “Jesus of Nazareth,” to which Jesus answered. “I am he.” Truthfully, the NIV added the “he” part. In the original Greek, Jesus simply says, “ego eimi” which simply translated is “I am.” Yes, “ego eimi” is the exact wording Jesus says for all the “I AM” statements. We already agreed Jesus used the “I AM” statements to reveal himself to be the Great I AM himself, Yahweh. Perhaps Jesus was presenting himself as God himself one last time. When the Jew asked for Jesus of Nazareth, Jesus answered “Yahweh.” Maybe that’s why the Jews fell back – the reaction of the true name of God, which was sacred to them. But then why did the Romans fall back? For that I will remind you of a story in chapter 7 of John. In John chapter 7, the chief priests and Pharisees have asked temple guards to arrest Jesus. These temple guards were most likely Roman. Yet they come back empty handed. Why didn’t they come back with Jesus? Their answer is simply, “No one ever spoke the way this man does.” There was something about Jesus. Simply the way he spoke blew people away.

Now, before we go on, I want to make a note about the irony that the Bible Knowledge Commentary pointed out for me. On one side, you have Judas Iscariot, chief priests, Pharisees, teachers of the law, elders, and 600 Roman soldiers, all armed with lanterns, torches, clubs and swords. On the other side, you have Jesus, completely unarmed, with all his disciples asleep (see Luke 22:45-46). Yet who is the one in charge? Jesus is. The crowd cowers when Jesus speaks. The Gospel of Matthew records Jesus making everyone aware that he could have called 12 legions (about 72,000!) angels down to rescue Him. When you see the Jews and the Romans alike, you almost think like they were aware of it, or they were almost even expecting Jesus to use his miraculous powers against them. Yet Jesus doesn’t, and that adds to the irony. The one with the authority in this seen submits to his arrest. He willingly gave Himself up, and He does it with class. Jesus pretty much tells the mob, “I’m the one you want, so let my disciples go.” This has been foreshadowed all throughout John. In John 6, while preaching to the Jews, Jesus says that the will of His Father is not lose any of the disciples. In John 10, when preaching about the Good Shepherd, Jesus declares that like the Good Shepherd, he would not lose a sheep, even it meant laying his life down for the sheep. And one last time in John 17, while Jesus is praying to the Father, he prays that he will not lose a disciple to the end. Prayer request answered.

Well, Simon Peter isn’t going without a fight. He remembers that he promised Jesus that He will fight for Jesus, even if it meant giving up his own life. Peter doesn’t want to become the denier that Jesus predicted him to be, so he takes his sword and chops off the ear of Malchus, the high priest’s servant. Notice the use of detail in the story. John gives the high priest’s servant a name. He also states it was the right ear cut off, aligning perfectly with Luke’s account. It really makes the story come alive.

Now I’ve seen movies, TV shows, even church plays, acting out the actions happening here, and neither of them really makes this scene action packed. You see Peter lunging at the servant, cutting off the ear, and nobody makes a move. They all watch. I kind of get a feeling that maybe a small scuffle or a small brawl broke out, for Jesus has to rebuke both sides. In John, Jesus disciplines Peter for not accepting God’s will for Jesus, but in Matthew, Jesus disciplines Peter for using a sword because (1) all who live by the sword die by the sword, (2) Jesus could have called down angels to help him if He needed help and (3) the Scriptures needed to be fulfilled. When the disciples see how Jesus reacted, they feel like Jesus has taken away their “fight,” and so they are left with “flight” and they flee the scene. (Note: For Jesus rebuking the mob, you’ll have to go to your Synoptic Gospels.) Jesus then turns to the mob and questions their method of arresting Jesus. Every day, Jesus was publicly and peacefully in Jerusalem. Why didn’t they quietly arrest him there? Why did they have to come in a large mob privately at night?

Now that Jesus is arrested, we begin with the trials of Jesus. For right now (this paragraph), I am going to speak in light of all 4 Gospels. From all 4 Gospels, Jesus undergoes 6 trials. 3 trials are with the Romans, and 3 trials are with the Jews. The first trial is before high priest Annas. The second trial is before high priest Caiaphas. The third trial is before the whole Sanhedrin, all 70 members. The fourth trial is before Pontius Pilate. The fifth trial is before Herod. The sixth trial is a re-trial before Pontius Pilate. In his Gospel, John does not tell about the third trial in front of the Sanhedrin or the fifth trial before Herod. John only mentions that Jesus had a trial with Caiaphas, but John does not go into detail about what happened there. This is a Bible study on John, so instead of bouncing back and forth between Gospels, we’re going just to read on the trials that John reported. But we can get a lot of what John has told us. It is widely believed that John did follow Jesus at a distance, from the Mount of Olives to Golgotha, maybe even watching in on all of the trials (John 18:15,16). And John is the only one to report on the trial before Annas the high priest. So let’s take a look at that trial.

But before we even get to that, we have to discuss the high priest in the 1st century AD. In all 4 Gospels, it will seem like there are 2 high priests. Luke seems to say it explicitly in Luke 3:2a, “during the high priesthood of Annas and Caiaphas…” If you remember in the Old Testament, there was only 1 person who was the high priest. This 1 person was the 1 and only person who could enter Holy of Holies 1 time a year. As the title hints, he is the highest of all priests. So how is there 2 by the time of Jesus? Well, there are a few theories. The first one is probably the simplest. The one high priest got stepped down and retired, and the next high priest stepped up. The stepping down high priest would be Annas, and the stepping up high priest would be Caiaphas. There are 2 problems with this first theory. The first probably is the question: “When?” When did Annas step down and Caiaphas step up? Well, obviously, it has be sometime during the earthly life of Jesus. Some of the proponents of the first theory say it happened between the birth and infancy of Jesus and the start of the ministry of Jesus, when Jesus was an adult. Other proponents of the first theory will say it happened during the 3-4 year span of Christ’s ministry. Still, both sides can not pin down a certain day or week, or even a month. Why they can’t, well, that leads us to our second problem. The second problem of the first theory is: “Why?” Why would a high priest step down? In the Old Testament, the high priest served for his whole life, until the day he died. They did not retire. There was no such thing as being “too old” to be a high preist. So why would Annas retire or step down? After all, as we will see in John 18, Annas still has a pretty serious role among the priests. (The best way to explain this, is that it wouldn’t make sense for Pop Benedict XVI to step down or retire, but continue to work with the new pope.) The other theories try to explain the why.

Our second theory does explain both the “when” and the “why.” The “why” has to deal with the political situation with the Romans. When the Romans were in charge, they didn’t mind the local regions or the local people groups having their own leader. They would even let them have their own king! But when all was said and done, that “king” reported to the local governor, who reported to Caesar. The best example would be Herod. Herod was the “king of the Jews,” but he ultimately had to report the governor, Pontius Pilate. I put “king of the Jews” in quotes because not every Jew received Herod as their king, including the religious leaders. First of all, it didn’t help that Herod wasn’t full-blood Jew, but rather half-Jew and half-Roman. The Jews expected their king to be fully Jewish. Second, and probably most important, it wasn’t the Jews that picked Herod as king, but rather the Romans. The Romans didn’t mind the local people groups having a king…as long as that king met their expectations and their approval. Between these two reasons, most Jews saw Herod as puppet to the Romans, so many Jews did not accept him. But what does this have to do with the high priests? Well, the Romans knew that the high priest had a strong leadership role. But the Jews refused to allow the Romans to touch it. They pretty much said to the Romans, “Oh no. We’ll let you pick and choose our king, but you will not touch our high priest. Our high priest has always been a descendant of Aaron, and he always will be.” Well, the Romans weren’t too pleased with that. They didn’t want a person being high priest for too long, in fear that the high priest will gain too much power over time and try something risky, like trying to overthrow the Roman government. So around 15 A.D., the Romans said to Annas, “Alright you’ve been high priest for 9 years. Your time is up. Select another high priest or we will.” Annas, not wanting to cause any problems, reluctantly submitted to the Romans. He chose Caiaphas to be his replacement. While this second theory answers the “when” and “why,” it still has holes. First of all, not everyone agrees with exactly what I wrote above. Some will say that it was the Romans who chose Caiaphas, not Annas. Others will claim that while Caiaphas stepped up, it doesn’t necessarily mean Annas stepped. These people will suggest that Annas and Caiaphas alternated as the high priest every year. The Romans were okay with this because they believed no high priest could amass a lot of power in one year, and then get it back after a year of not being high priest. So there are disagreements within the theory. Also, the second theory doesn’t fully answer the question, “Why Caiaphas?” Annas has 5 sons. So why didn’t he choose a son but rather his son-in-law Caiaphas?

The third theory attempts to answer that. This theory focuses in on the religious parties of the Jewish religion: the Pharisees and the Sadducees. The Pharisees and Sadducees did sharply disagree on things, in both the political realm and the religious realm. According to the this theory, the Pharisees and Sadducees disagreed so sharply in the first century that they did not trust a high priest of the opposite party. So the Pharisees would not trust a Sadducee high priest and the Sadducees would not trust a Pharisee high priest. So the Pharisees chose a Pharisee high priest and the Sadducees would choose a Sadducee high priest. This would result in 2 high priests and this is why you have 2 high priests in the time of Jesus. Caiaphas is believed to be the Sadducee high priest and the Pharisee high priest is Annas. There are a couple problems with this theory. If on the Day of Atonement, only one man was to enter the Holy of Holies, which one would it be? Wouldn’t it be wrong for both of them to enter? Also, Annas and Caiaphas seem to be agreeing to well to be of opposite parties. Even over Jesus, the Pharisees and Sadducees disagreed about Jesus (see Luke 20:27-40).

If you made me pick between the 3 theories, I guess I would have to choose the second theory because it has the most scholars behind it, and it has the fewest objections. But I do believe all 3 theories show us something about Annas and Caiaphas. The biggest observation is Annas and Caiaphas are working together, almost as equals. If there is a hierarchy, it would be Annas over Caiaphas, as Annas sometimes seems to whisper into the ear of Caiaphas what decisions to make. The trial of Jesus would be a good example. Jesus has to first go in front of Annas. According to all 3 theories (or at least the first and second), Annas is not the high priest at the time, but rather Caiaphas is. But Jesus has to go to Annas so Annas can decide what Caiaphas should do. After all, Caiaphas does seem to follow suit with Annas.

Back to the text. When brought before Annas, Annas asks Jesus questions about His disciples and His teachings. These would be normal questions on the accusations of starting an insurrection. From the broader Gospel view of Christ’s trials, we know the trials Jesus faced were unfair and illegal (not up to legal standards), but there is a small proof of that in this text. In John 18:19, John records Annas asking question. According to Jewish tradition, the high priest was to act more like a judge, and less like a prosecuting attorney. Just as the judge is not allowed to ask the defendant questions, so the high priest was not allowed to ask defendant Jesus questions. Yet Jesus does not shy away from these questions. Jesus says to Annas that all His teaching has been public. So everything Annas heard is true, and there is nothing more to say. But defendant Jesus goes on to call witnesses for himself. He tells Annas that anyone who heard him will be able to testify everything that he has said. Perhaps Jesus was calling out Annas for setting up an improper trial. A proper trial would have real and honest witnesses, and they could attest that Jesus was innocent.

Well, one of the officials took that as Jesus sassing the high priest and that official struck Jesus in the face. Here we see another error in the trial. It was illegal to bring any kind of physical pain or harassment to a defendant who was still considered innocent. At this point (and throughout all of the trials), Jesus remains innocent. Jesus proceeds to call this official out, too. Jesus knows that the slap would only be necessary if He did something wrong. So he asks the official what he did wrong to deserve it. I can almost picture the official dumfounded because he knew Jesus did nothing wrong. Then Jesus continues to pressure for his witnesses to be brought for, even asking the official to be his witness.

From here, Annas has gotten all he needed. Annas probably was hoping for more out of his end of the trial, in order to give Caiaphas the decision he needs to make. All that happens, however, is Annas’s trial is put under question by Jesus. He’s not really getting anything, so Annas just moves him on to his “real-er” trial with Caiaphas. But I think at this point Annas has also declared Jesus guilty in his mind, even without proof or witnesses.

John doesn’t record either of the other Jewish trials. He doesn’t record the trial with Caiaphas, and he doesn’t record the trial in front of the Sanhedrin (most likely led by Caiaphas). Yet John is the only Gospel writer to write about the trial with Annas. Why would John mention the trial with Annas, and not the other trials? Although John may not necessarily be painting a picture of Jesus as God or the Christ, I do believe John is trying to look at the Jewish trials from another point of view, and it kind of goes back to what we see at Christ’s arrests. Remember how I pointed out the irony of Jesus, the one who seems to be in power and have control, ends up being the lowly, submissive one? Well, the trial at Annas portrays the same Jesus. Annas tries to question the teachings of Jesus, but Jesus ends up questioning Annas’s motives and his trial. Annas tries to make Jesus look guilty, but Jesus ends up proving His innocence. Annas attempts to win the trial, but Jesus ends up being the winner. John keeps on adding onto the irony that while Jesus is bound, he is the one in control. If in any way this shows Jesus is God, this is the proof. On the earth as a man, Jesus might be submissive and humbled, but in heavenly realm as God, Jesus is the king, judge and ruler over Annas, Caiaphas and the Sanhedrin.

I’m going to stop right there. Once again, I will remind you that while the text of the Scriptures are the inerrant, inspired revelation from God, the numbering of the chapters and verses are not. I believe it would have been better to end chapter 18 at verse 27 and began chapter 19 where John 18:28. Why? John 18:28 begins a new phase of the trials for Jesus. Jesus has gone through 3 Jewish trials, and all trials have found him guilty, even though they are unjust and illegal. Even though the Jews want to pass the death penalty, they cannot, for they need Roman permission to do so. So it’s up to the Romans to decide whether or not Jesus deserves death. Will they pass the same judgment? We’ll have to see in chapter 19, but I will pick up again in chapter 18.